There's no such thing as worker's rights. You don't get special rights just for being a worker.
Well in Belgium there is, and I'm pretty sure these worker's rights can be found all throughout the European union, including Spain.
Belgium:
https://www.socialsecurity.be/foreign/en/employer_limosa/infos/otherobligations/labour.htmlSpain:
http://www.foreignstaffing.com/about/international-labor-law/spain-labor-laws/There are only human rights, and they are the rights to own property, including one's own bodies, and to not have their property aggressed upon by others. And these rights haven't been breached here.
If they are being harmed with pesticides because they are not provided the necessary protection (protective suit, masks...), then their right to good health is being violated. Among other things. Right to hygiene must be written somewhere there too.
Nobody forced them to be migrant workers.
Well we could discuss history of colonization and its impact on various native societies, but that's not what we're about today.
Nobody forced them to be migrant workers. They chose to do that out of their own wills. And what's more, that's not the employer's problem or their responsibility to fix. If someone would starve if you don't give them a job, does that make you responsible for hiring them? No. It's their responsiblity to find their own means of subsistence that don't involve committing crimes against others. If you still want to help them, that's perfectly fine. But you shouldn't be compelled to by law.
That doesn't give the employers the right to treat them like slaves. Again, it goes against basic human rights. Send them back to their country or treat them like respectable employees.
Workers.
And what do you mean by exploited? Everybody is exploited. Exploitation means putting some resource to use. You are exploiting me by reading my posts, and I'm exploiting you. The workers are exploiting the employers to get jobs that will pay them, in their view, better money and with better working conditions than they were able to get in their own countries. We know this because they chose to move there and stay there with all the complications that implies, just so that they could have those jobs.
Well, in french, the word "exploited" is commonly used in situations where the person is abused, works a lot in often bad conditions, and is given little in return.
I didn't say they lied. It could all be true and it would still be extortion. And of course, if they don't want the jobs anymore, it doesn't cost them anything to make up lies.
Extortion, that's the word.
Yes, it could cost them a (free?) trip back
to misery home.
The only valid complain is the one where they said they're only being paid for 16 days even though they worked 26, which I doubt. And the part about pesticides would only be valid if they were told they wouldn't be sprayed with them. If they were aware of what was going on and they chose to keep the job, it's their responsibility if they got sick.
So you do think they're lying. Yeah, maybe they're exaggerating numbers so people actually react. It's understandable.
Like I said, they might have nowhere else to go, having no money for a return ticket or a smuggler, and their job could be the only one accessible to illegal migrants. Too bad for them, had to think twice before taking that boat to a fantasized better life. Can't blame the farm owners for being a tinny bit flexible on some laws...
That could very well be true, but that's not the point.
Point was their complaints probably won't be listened to, as the Spanish state benefits more from export than it does from looking after it's illegal immigrants, so them trying to lie to extort money would be a very desperate move.