"Como trabajadores y mujeres, tenemos que luchar por nuestros derechos y contra la violencia tanto en la labor como en la casa"
"As women and as workers, we have to fight for our rights and against violence both in the fields and in our own homes"
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On Wednesday, October 26, a standing room only
crowd gathered at the CIW to greet the United
Nations' Independent Expert on Extreme Poverty,
Dr. Arjun Sengupta, who came to Immokalee accompanied
by two colleagues for a day-long visit as part
of his work documenting extreme poverty in the
US and challenging its causes through the UN
Commission on Human Rights.
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Dr. Sengupta, seated in the photo above with
the gray jacket, met with CIW leaders to discuss
conditions in Immokalee, one of this country's
poorest towns. The UN representatives and CIW
members discussed the history of the CIW's struggle
to improve working and living conditions in
Immokalee, the resurgence of modern-day slavery
in the agricultural industry, and the CIW's
analysis locating the roots of those conditions
in the major, multi-national corporations that
buy Florida produce and use their overwhelming
market power to drive prices -- and wages --
as low as possible.
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Following the meeting, Immokalee residents still
reeling from the effects of Hurricane Wilma
-- which slammed into Immokalee only two days
earlier -- lined up outside CIW headquarters
to receive water, ice, and food provided by
FEMA and the National Guard.
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As it did all week following the devastating
hurricane, the CIW provided crucial leadership
in getting emergency supplies to the worst-hit
of Immokalee's residents, the farmworker community.
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