Yahoo – AFP, 12 June 2013
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An
indigenous woman of Veracruz state carries her child at a tomato
processing
plant in Toliman, Jalisco state, Mexico on June 11, 2013.
|
Mexican
authorities have rescued at least 275 people who were being held in slave-like
conditions at a camp where tomatoes are sorted and packed for export, officials
said.
Thirty-nine
teenagers were among those being held against their will at the Bioparques de
Occidente camp in Toliman, in the western state of Jalisco, regional prosecutor
Salvador Gonzalez said late Tuesday.
Five
foremen were arrested for "grave violations and crimes, including the
illegal privation of liberty and human trafficking," Gonzalez told AFP.
The victims
were rescued when a worker escaped and made it to the state capital Jalisco to
file a complaint.
Gonzalez
said the contractors ran ads on the radio seeking workers, and offered room and
board.
But when
the workers arrived they found themselves in overcrowded housing and were paid
half of what had been offered, much of it delivered in vouchers redeemable at
the company store, where items were sold at a high markup.
One of the
victims, Valentin Hernandez, went to work at the site with his wife and
children. He told AFP he was housed in a tiny room with two other couples who
also had children.
"The
food was rancid and rotten. They held us as slaves," Hernandez said.
"They
told us that we could leave if we wanted to, but they didn't let us. They would
hide our belongings and threaten us to stay. And if someone tried to escape and
they were discovered, they were brought back and beaten."
Gonzalez
said as many as 280 people may have been held against their will at the site.
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