A collection of articles defining our times.
The pages contain clickable links, don't let
the titles fool you, some of the best articles
have very non-descript titles and there are usually
more articles on the matters in the days and week
pages the links land on so it's a sort of treasure hunt
through history, Enjoy!
The manufacturer of Fanta is being urged to help
address the poor conditions and low wages endured by some African
migrant workers harvesting oranges in southern Italy. Andrew Wasley
reports from Rosarno
It is perhaps the worst address in Western Europe. A ramshackle
slum with a noisy road on one side, a railway on another, and a
stagnant-looking river flowing close-by. The camp itself consists of
little more than a collection of shoddily-erected canvas tents and some
abandoned buildings and sheds.
Behind the wire fence, fires burn
amid piles of rubbish – discarded wholesale-sized tins of olive oil,
plastic bottles, newspapers, food scraps and other unidentifiable filth.
Woodsmoke stings your eyes. As the winter sun falls, the scene is
almost apocalyptic; dozens of migrants swarm around us – cooking,
chopping firewood, calling out, trying to keep warm – their figures
silhouetted against the flames.
They are from Africa – Ghana,
Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast – and this squalid camp, where doctors say
conditions are as bad, or worse, than in refugee camps in war zones, is
currently home to at least two hundred itinerants.
The migrants
are here in Rosarno, in Calabria, southern Italy, to harvest the
region's extensive orange crop. Each winter, as many as 2000 migrants
travel to this small agricultural town to scratch a living picking
oranges that will end up on sale in markets and supermarkets, or as
juices or concentrates used in the manufacture of soft drinks. READ MORE
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