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: Spain
12 immigrant workers killed at Spanish railway crossing
By Vicky Short
8 January 2001
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A human catastrophe has once again struck the immigrant community
in Spain. At 7.40am January 3, a suburban train in Lorca, southeast
Spain hit an overloaded van carrying 14 agricultural workers from
Ecuador as it drove across a railway crossing. Twelve of the occupantseight
men and four womenwere killed as the vehicle was dragged
200 meters along the line and destroyed. The fatalities included
a mother and son and a father and son.
Identification was difficult as the workers were not carrying
any documentation, but relatives later identified eight of the
deceased, seven of whom came from the Ecuadorian province of Oro.
The only survivors were the driver, 46-year-old Noelio Elías
León, who was seriously injured, and 13-year-old Nancy
Porras, who escaped with minor injuries. She said later that as
she had to help bring money home, she had been standing
in for her mother who had broken a leg a few days prior to the
accident. One of the bodies identified was that of a 16-year-old
boy. Although the three carriages that made up the local train
was derailed in the collision, its 30 passengers were only slightly
hurt.
The unmanned railway crossing is one of hundreds that still
exist in Spain. These have no barriers and only have posts holding
a STOP signal.
The circumstances of the accident are not yet clear. It is
reported that the van was travelling parallel to the railway line
in the opposite direction to the train before turning to cross.
Nancy Porras said later in hospital that she had first alerted
the driver to the approaching train. I don't think that
he had seen it, she said.
The vehicle in which the workers were travelling was a ten-year-old,
8-seater, Fiat Talento Supercombi van bought second-hand by the
driver to transport workers to the fields. According to the UGT
trade union, the driver made several trips a dayverbally
contracting workers who were employed at piecework rates. He was
the only Ecuadorian in the van with proper work and residency
papers.
On the morning of the accident, Noelio Elías picked
up the workers as usual to go to Puerto Lumbreras to begin a day's
work gathering broccoli, something that thousands of Ecuadorians
do everyday in the region of Murcia. The workers were allegedly
on their way to work for Greensol S.L., a small firm that is part
of an agribusiness conglomerate. The company had been declared
provisionally insolvent, but continued trading under a different
name and the workers had not even been paid their miserable wages.
No manager or contractor appeared at the scene once the news of
the accident was known and the owners of Greensol are now on the
run.
Murcia lies next door to Almería, the site of several
racist attacks on Magrebi immigrant workers last year. It is part
of Spain's south eastern region that has been converted into an
extremely profitable vegetable garden. This is due to the development
of hot house methods that enables two, three and even four harvests
a year, as well as utilising a foreign work force employed on
a seasonal casual basis who are paid extremely low wages and enjoy
no rights whatsoever.
Non-Governmental Organisations put the number of Ecuadorian
workers in Lorca alone at 12,000, with some 20,000 in the province
of Murcia as a whole. Sixty-five percent of the population in
Ecuador are reported to be unemployed or under-employed. Nearly
half a million people are believed to have left the country in
the last couple of years, with many making their way to Spain.
In Murcia, they appear to have replaced all but a few North African
workers. Employers are reported as saying they prefer Ecuadorian
workers because they speak the language, work harder and are more
docile.
Early every morning, they gather in their hundreds in the Plaza
del Ovalo in Lorca, waiting for the small agricultural managers
and middle-men for the big agribusiness to select them for a day's
work. They are then huddled onto the vans that transport them
to the fields, greenhouses and warehouses where the broccoli and
lettuces are reaped and processed, working up to 11 hours for
around $3 an hour. Alternatively, they are contracted on a piecework
basis paid 10 pesetas (less than 1 US cent) a kilo of broccoli.
Often they are forced by the employers to work at night to avoid
the labour inspectors and are continuously under threat of being
reported to the authorities for working without permits if they
protest.
Mercedes, the sister of one of the dead women, Gladys María
Loayza Capa de León, emphasised that her sister would be
alive today is she had had work and residency papers. The
van left Lorca before daylight, because none of them had papers,
and at night all cats are grey. The driver did not choose the
safest or shortest route to go to the plantation, because it is
very dangerous to drive on the motorway where there is usually
Civil Guard patrols. So they take secondary roads with low traffic.
She added that if they had taken the motorwaythe shortest
routethe van would not have had to use the railway crossing.
I am not kidding you, my sister Gladys was not only killed
by the train.
The accident has again brought to light the inhuman conditions
which foreign workers are subjected to in Spain. Nancy Porras,
the 13-year-old girl injured in the accident, had travelled to
Spain 11 months ago with her 8-year-old sister to join their parents
who had arrived months earlier. The family lived in a two-bedroom
house along with four other adults to help pay the rent. They
were forced to mortgage their home in Ecuador and have left a
debts there of about $30,000.
A similar situation affected Norman and Alberto, the father
and son killed in the accident. Standing over their coffins, their
friend Alfredo Javier said: Norman had been in Spain for
eight months and he leaves a wife and five children in Ecuador.
His 21-year-old son Alberto arrived only on December 28 and it
was just the second time he had worked. He died having mortgaged
his mother's house in order to get here.
The president of the National Coordinator for Ecuadorians in
Spain, Guillermo Imbaquingo, said, The minimum debt for
each one of us is around $2,500$1,600, to pay for the air
plane ticket and the rest to be shown at Barajas [Madrid airport],
because otherwise they don't believe that you are coming as a
tourist.
Despite their protests at the scene of the accident, both the
social democratic and Stalinist trade unionsthe General
Workers Union (UGT) and Workers Commissions (CC OO)are fully
aware of the situation confronting immigrant workers and have
turned a blind eye for years. They have responded to the present
tragedy by asking the government to establish whether the companies
employing the dead Ecuadorian workers had administrative
responsibility for the labour irregularities and illegalities
in their employment. In an article published on the CC OO
website, the union admits that in the last two years it has been
involved in several cases against Greensol S.L of complaints of
low wages and unfair dismissals. The union says the company does
not provide its workers with contracts and Social Security
payments, wages are below those established in labour agreements,
with lengthy working days, etc. This is the reality detected in
this company, which fulfils all the conditions of illegality and
all the factors of risk that guarantee workplace disasters...
Given that these workers problems are largely caused by their
difficulties in obtaining proper documentation for work and residence
in Spain, the union's demands that the regional authorities exercise
an exhaustive control of the transport, living and working conditions
endured by the immigrant workers in our region are pure
demagogy. Moreover, after finding out that one of the passengers
was 13 years old and another 16 years old, the CC OO trade union
admitted that it knew around 12,000 minors worked in the agricultural
business in Spain.
Ever since the right wing Popular Party came to office in 1996,
the unions' main concern has been to preserve its privileged position
in the tripartite agreements concluded with government and the
employers. These have served to implement changes in the labour
market facilitating lower wages and the destruction of the working
conditions of Spanish and immigrant workers alike.
See Also:
Spain imposes new
anti-immigrant legislation
[20 December 2000]
Spain
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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