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María Luisa Mendonça brought to the meeting in
Havana, a powerful documentary film on the
subject of manual sugarcane cutting in Brazil.
As I did in my previous reflection, I have written a
summary using María Luisa’s own paragraphs and
phrases. It goes as follows:
We are aware that most of the wars in the last few
decades have been waged over control of energy
sources. Both in central and peripheral nations,
energy consumption is guaranteed for the
privileged sectors, while the majority of the
world's population does not have access to basic
services. The per capita consumption of energy
in the United States is 13,000 kilowatts, while
the world average is 2,429 and in Latin America
the average is 1,601.
The private monopoly of energy sources is ensured by
clauses in the bilateral or multilateral Free
Trade Agreements.
The role of the peripheral nations is to produce cheap
energy for the central wealthy nations, which
represents a new phase in the colonization
process.
It’s necessary to demystify all the propaganda about the
alleged benefits of agrifuels. In the case of
ethanol, the growing and processing of sugarcane
pollutes the soil and the sources of drinking
water because it uses large amounts of chemical
products.
Ethanol distillation produces a residue called vinasse.
For every liter of ethanol produced, 10 to 13
liters of vinasse are generated. Part of this
residue can be used as fertilizer, but most of
it pollutes rivers and the sources of
underground water. If Brazil were to produce 17
or 18 billion liters of ethanol per year, this
means that at least 170 billion liters of
vinasse would be deposited in the sugarcane
field areas. Just imagine the environmental
impact.
Burning sugarcane to facilitate the harvesting process,
destroys many of the microorganisms in the soil,
contaminates the air and causes many respiratory
illnesses.
The Brazilian National Institute of Space Research
issues a state of emergency almost every year in
Sao Paulo –where 60% of Brazil’s ethanol
production takes place– because the burning-off
has plunged the humidity levels in the air to
extreme lows, between 13% and 15%; breathing is
impossible during this period in the Sao Paulo
area where the sugarcane harvest takes place.
The expansion of agrienergy production, as we know, is
of great interest to the corporations dealing
with genetically modified or transgenetic
organisms, such as Monsanto, Syngenta, Dupont,
Bass and Bayer.
In the case of Brazil, the Votorantim Corporation has
developed technologies for the production of a
non-edible transgenetic sugarcane, and we know
of many corporations that are developing this
same type of technology; since there are no
measures in place to avoid transgenetic
contamination in the native crop fields, this
practice places food production at risk.
With regards to the denationalization of Brazilian
territory, large companies have bought up sugar
mills in Brazil: Bunge, Novo Group, ADM, Dreyfus
as well as business magnates George Soros and
Bill Gates.
As a result of all this, we are aware that the expansion
of ethanol production has led to the expulsion
of peasants from their lands and has created a
situation of dependency on what we call the
sugarcane economy, not because the sugarcane
industry generates jobs, on the contrary, it
generates unemployment because this industry
controls the territory. This means that there
is no room for other productive sectors.
At the same time, we are faced with the propaganda about
the efficiency of this industry. We know that it
is based on the exploitation of cheap and slave
labor. Workers are paid according to the amount
of sugar cane they cut, not according to number
of hours they have worked.
In Sao Paulo State where the industry is most modern
–“modern” is relative of course– and it is the
country’s biggest producer, the goal for each
worker is to cut between 10 to 15 tons of cane
per day.
Pedro Ramos, a professor at Campinas University, made
these calculations: in the 1980’s, the workers
cut around 4 tons a day and were paid the
equivalent of more or less 5 dollars. Today,
they need to cut 15 tons of sugarcane to be paid
3 dollars a day.
Even the Ministry of Labor in Brazil made a study which
shows that before, 100 square meters of
sugarcane yielded 10 tons; today, with
transgenetic cane one must cut 300 square meters
to reach 10 tons. Thus, workers must work three
times more to cut 10 tons. This pattern of
exploitation has resulted in serious health
problems and even death for the workers.
A researcher with the Ministry of Labor in Sao Paulo
says that in Brazil, sugar and ethanol are
soaked in blood, sweat and death. In 2005, the
Ministry of Labor in Sao Paulo reported the
death of 450 worker for other causes such as
murder and accidents –would this be because
transportation to the refineries is very
unsafe?– and also as a result of illnesses such
as heart attack and cancer.
According to María Cristina Gonzaga, who carried out the
survey, this Ministry of Labor research shows
that in the last five years, 1,383 sugarcane
workers have died in Sao Paulo State alone.
Slave labor is also common in this sector. Workers are
usually migrants from the northeast or from
Minas Gerais, lured in by intermediaries.
Normally the contract is not directly with the
company, but through intermediaries –in Brazil
we call them “gatos”— who chose the laborers for
the sugar mills.
In 2006, the district attorney’s office of the Public
Ministry inspected 74 sugar mills, only in Sao
Paulo, and all of them were taken to court.
In March 2007 alone, the district attorney’s office of
the Ministry of Labor rescued 288 workers from
slavery in Sao Paulo.
That same month, in Mato Grosso State, 409 workers were
pulled out of a sugar mill that produces
ethanol; among them was a group of 150
indigenous people. In Mato Grosso, the central
area of the country, indigenous people are used
as slave labor force in the sugar industry.
Every year, hundreds of workers suffer similar
conditions in the fields. What are these
conditions? They work without being legally
reported, with no protective equipment, without
adequate food or water, without access to
washrooms and with very precarious housing;
moreover, they have to pay for their housing and
food, which is very expensive, and they also
have to buy their implements such as boots and
machetes and, of course, when work-related
accidents occur, which is often, they do not
receive adequate care.
For us, the central issue is the elimination of the
latifundia because behind this modern façade we
have a central issue, and that is the latifundia
in Brazil and, of course, in other Latin
American countries. Likewise, a serious food
production policy is called for.
Having said this, I would like to present a documentary
that we filmed in Pernambuco State with
sugarcane workers; this is one of the biggest
sugarcane producing regions, and so you will be
able to see what the conditions are really like.
This documentary was made with the Pastoral Land
Commission of Brazil (CPT) and with the unions
of forestry workers in the state of Pernambuco.
With this, the outstanding and much admired Brazilian
leader concluded her speech.
And now I shall present the opinions of the sugarcane
cutters as they appeared in the film shown to us
by María Luisa. In the documentary, when the
people are not identified by name, they are
identified as being a man, a woman or a young
man. I am not including them all because there
were so many.
Severino Francisco de Silva.- When I was 8 years old, my
father moved to the Junco refinery. When I got
there, I was about to turn 9; my father began to
work and I was tying up the cane with him. I
worked some 14 or 15 years in the Junco sugar
mill.
A woman.- I’ve been living at the sugar mill for 36
years. Here I was married and I gave birth to 11
children.
A man.- I’ve been cutting cane for many years, I don’t
even know how to count.
A man.- I started working when I was 7 and my life is
that: cutting cane and weeding.
A young man.- I was born here, I’m 23 years old, and
I've been cutting cane since I was 9.
A woman.- I worked for 13 years here in Salgado Plant.
I planted cane, spread fertilizer, cleaned
sugarcane fields.
Severina Conceiçäo.- I know how to do all this field
work: spread fertilizer, plant sugar cane. I
did it all with a belly this big (she refers to
her pregnancy) and with the basket beside me,
and I kept on working.
A man.- I work; every work is difficult, but sugarcane
harvest is the worst work we have here in
Brazil.
Edleuza.- I get home and I wash the dishes, clean the
house, do the house chores, do everything. I
used to cut cane and sometimes I’d get home and
I wasn’t able to even wash the dishes, my hands
were hurting with blisters.
Adriano Silva.- The problem is that the foreman wants
too much of us at work. There are days when we
cut cane and get paid, but there are days when
we don’t get paid. Sometimes it’s enough, and
sometimes it isn’t.
Misael.- We have a perverse situation here; the foreman
wants to take off from the weight of the cane.
He says that what we cut here is all that we
have and that’s that. We are working like
slaves, do you understand? You can't do it like
this!
Marco.- Harvesting sugar cane is slave work, it’s really
hard work. We start out at 3 in the morning;
we get back at 8 at night. It’s only good for
the boss, because he earns more every day that
goes by and the worker loses, production
decreases and everything is for the boss.
A man.- Sometimes we go to sleep without having washed,
there’s no water, we wash up in a stream down
there.
A young man.- Here we have no wood for cooking, each one
of us, if we want to eat, has to go out and find
wood.
A man.- Lunch is whatever you can bring from home, we
eat just like that, in the hot sun, carrying on
as well as you can in this life.
A young man.- People who work a lot need to have enough
food. While the boss of the sugar plantation
has an easy life, with all the best of
everything, we suffer.
A woman.- I have gone hungry. I would often go to bed
hungry, sometimes I had nothing to eat, nothing
to feed my daughter with; sometimes I’d go
looking for salt; that was the easiest thing to
find.
Egidio Pereira.- You have two or three kids, and if you
don’t look after yourself, you starve; there
isn’t enough to live on.
Ivete Cavalcante.- There is no such thing as a salary
here; you have to clean a ton of cane for eight
reales; you earn according to whatever you can
cut: if you cut a ton, you earn eight reales,
there is no set wage.
A woman.- A salary? I’ve never heard of that.
Reginaldo Souza.- Sometimes they pay us in money.
Nowadays they are paying in money; in the winter
they pay with a voucher.
A woman.- The voucher, well, you work and he writes
everything down on paper, he passes it on to
another person who goes out to buy stuff at the
market. People don’t see the money they earn.
José Luiz.- The foreman does whatever he wants with the
people. What’s happening is that I called for
him to “calculate the cane”, and he didn’t want
to. I mean: in this case he is forcing someone
to work. And so the person works for free for
the company.
Clovis da Silva.- It’s killing us! We cut cane for half
a day, we think we are going to get some money,
and when he comes around to calculate we are
told that the work was worth nothing.
Natanael.- The cattle trucks bring the workers here,
it’s worse than for the boss’s horse; because
when the boss puts his horse on the truck, he
gives him water, he puts sawdust down to protect
his hoofs, he gives him hay, and there is a
person to go with him; as for the workers, let
them do what they can: get in, shut the door and
that’s that. They treat the workers as if they
were animals. The “Pro-Alcohol” doesn’t help the
workers, it only helps the sugarcane suppliers,
it helps the bosses and they constantly get
richer; because if it would create jobs for the
workers, that would be basic, but it doesn’t
create jobs.
José Loureno.- They have all this power because in the
House, state or federal, they have a politician
representing these sugarcane mills. Some of the
owners are deputies, ministers or relatives of
sugar mill owners, who facilitate this situation
for the owners.
A man.- It seems that our work never ends. We don’t have
holidays, or a Christmas bonus, everything is
lost. Also, we don’t even get a fourth of our
salary, which is compulsory; it’s what we use to
buy clothes at the end of the year, or clothing
for our children. They don’t supply us with any
of that stuff, and we see how every day, it gets
much more difficult.
A woman.- I am a registered worker and I’ve never had a
right to anything, not even medical leaves. When
we get pregnant, we have a right to a medical
leave, but I didn’t have that right, family
guarantees; I also never got any Christmas
bonus, I always got some little thing, and then
nothing more.
A man.- For 12 years he’s never paid the bonuses or
vacations.
A man.- You can’t get sick, you work day and night on top
of the truck, cutting cane, at dawn. I became
sick, and I was a strong man.
Reinaldo.- One day I went to work wearing sneakers; when
I swung the machete to cut cane, I cut my toe, I
finished work and went home.
A young man.- There are no boots, we work like this,
many of us work barefoot, the conditions are
bad. They said that the sugar mill was going to
donate boots. A week ago he cut his foot (he
points) because there are no boots.
A young man.- I was sick, I was sick for three days, I
didn’t get paid, they didn't pay me a thing. I
saw the doctor to ask for a leave and they
didn't give me one.
A young man.- There was a lad who came from “Macugi”.
He was at work when he started to feel sick, and
vomit. You need a lot of energy, the sun is very
hot and people aren’t made of steel, the human
body just can’t resist this.
Valdemar.- This poison we use (he refers to the
herbicides) brings a lot of illness. It causes
different kinds of diseases: skin cancer, bone
cancer, it enters the blood and destroys our
health. You feel nauseous, you can even fall
over.
A man.- In the period between harvests there is
practically no work.
A man.- The work that the foreman tells you to do, must
be done; because as you know, if we don’t do it…
We aren’t the bosses; it’s them that are the
bosses. If they give you a job, you have to do
it.
A man.- I’m here hoping someday to have a piece of land
and end my days in the country, so that I can
fill my belly and the bellies of my children and
my grandchildren who live here with me.
Could it be that there is anything else?
End of the documentary.
There is nobody more grateful than I for this testimony
and for María Luisa’s presentation which I have
just summarized. They make me to remember the
first years of my life, an age when human beings
tend to be very active.
I was born on a privately owned sugarcane latifundium
bordering on the north, east and west on large
tracts of land belonging to three American
transnational companies which, together,
possessed more than 600 thousand acres. Cane
cutting was done by hand in green sugarcane
fields; at that time we didn’t use herbicides or
even fertilizers. A plantation could last more
than 15 years. Labor was very cheap and the
transnationals earned a lot of money.
The owner of the sugarcane plantation where I was born
was a Galician immigrant, from a poor peasant
family, practically an illiterate; at first, he
had been sent here as a soldier, taking the
place of a rich man who had paid to avoid
military service and at the end of the war he
was shipped back to Galicia. He returned to
Cuba on his own like countless other Galicians
who migrated to other countries of Latin
America.
He worked as a hand for an important
trans-national company, the United Fruit
Company. He had organizational skills and so he
recruited a large number of day-workers like
himself, became a contractor and ended up buying
land with his accumulated profits in an area
neighboring the southern part of the big
American company. In the eastern end of the
country, the traditionally independent-minded
Cuban population had increased notably and
lacked land; but the main burden of eastern
agriculture, at the beginning of the last
century, rested on the backs of slaves who had
been freed a few years earlier or were the
descendents of the old slaves and on the backs
of Haitian immigrants. The Haitians did not
have any relatives. They lived alone in their
miserable huts made of palm trees, clustered in
hamlets, with only two or three women among all
of them. During the short harvesting season,
cockfights would take place.
The Haitians would bet their pitiful earnings and the
rest they used to buy food which had gone
through many intermediaries and was very
expensive.
The Galician landowner lived there, on the sugarcane
plantation. He would go out just to tour the
plantations and he would talk to anyone who
needed or wanted something from him. Often times
he would help them out, for reasons that were
more humanitarian than economic. He could make
decisions.
The managers of the United Fruit Company plantations
were Americans who had been carefully chosen and
they were very well paid. They lived with their
families in stately mansions, in selected
spots. They were like some distant gods,
mentioned in a respectful tone by the starving
laborers. They were never seen at the sugarcane
fields where they sent their subordinates. The
shareholders of the big transnationals lived in
the United States or other parts of the world.
The expenses of the plantations were budgeted
and nobody could increase one single cent.
I know very well the family that grew out of the second
marriage of that Galician immigrant with a
young, very poor Cuban peasant girl, who, like
him, had not been able to go to school. She was
very self-sacrificing and absolutely devoted to
her family and to the plantation’s financial
activities.
Those of you abroad who are reading my reflections on
the Internet will be surprised to learn that
that landowner was my father. I am the third of
that couple’s seven children; we were all born
in a room in a country home, far away from any
hospital, with the help of a peasant midwife,
dedicated heart and soul to her job and calling
upon years of practical experience. Those lands
were all handed over to the people by the
Revolution.
I should just like to add that we totally support the
decree for nationalization of the patent from a
transnational pharmaceutical company to produce
and sell in Brazil an AIDS medication, Efavirenz,
that is far too expensive, just like many
others, as well as the recent mutually
satisfactory solution to the dispute with
Bolivia about the two oil refineries.
I would like to reiterate our deepest respect for the
people of our sister nation of Brazil.
Fidel Castro Ruz
May 14, 2007
5: 12 pm
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