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Ecuador apologizes to farm workers deemed to live like slaves

Natalie Fisher by Natalie Fisher
June 1, 2025
in Business
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A man in Ecuador holds up a shirt with the slogan 'Furukawa, never again,' alluding to a Japanese textile firm found to have abused its workers. ©AFP

Quito (AFP) – Ecuador’s government apologized Saturday to some 300 people who worked as farmers for a Japanese textile firm in conditions which a court likened to modern-day slavery. These people worked on plantations that produced abaca, a fiber used in textiles and the auto industry. As of 2021, Furukawa’s plantations for abaca covered almost 23,000 hectares spread over three provinces on the Pacific coast, where the majority of the population is Black.

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Some workers gave birth to children in unsanitary and overcrowded camps, while others were denied proper medical attention after work-related injuries, according to testimony given at a news conference in Quito back in December. That month the Constitutional Court ordered Furukawa to pay $120,000 to each of 342 victims — a total of around $41 million. The company was also ordered to make a public apology to them. It has not complied with either order.

The court said that over the course of five years Furukawa had people living in conditions of modern-day slavery in its abaca fields. It also ordered the government to apologize to the workers, and that is what happened Saturday. The company violated “national and international regulations that affected, in essence, human dignity,” Labor Minister Ivonne Nunez said. She said “the state, through the various ministries, as the sentence explains, turned a deaf ear” to the plight of the abused workers.

Nunez spoke at a ceremony with other government ministers at Quito’s Independence Plaza, as ex-Furukawa workers chanted slogans such as “reparations, reparations” and “modern slavery, never again.” After the court ruling, Furukawa said it does not have the money to pay the damages ordered by the tribunal and called them disproportionate. Back in December, at a meeting at a human rights group’s headquarters, plantation workers told horror stories of their lives raising abaca.

“We have been confronting the monster that is Furukawa,” Segundo Ordonez, a 59-year-old farmer, said at the meeting.

© 2024 AFP

Tags: agriculturehuman rightslabor rights
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