Agricultural workers are among the world’s most hungry and are largely excluded from national legal protective
frameworks, the UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food, said in New York today.
States need to step up to ensure that the people who produce our food do not go hungry, and that their fundamental
rights are fully respected, Hilal Elver conveyed in her annual report.
The Special Rapporteur said that agricultural workers, who comprise approximately one third of the world’s workforce,
over one billion people, face formidable barriers to the realization of their right to food, often working without
labour and employment protections and under dangerous conditions.
She further explained that many of the agricultural workers are employed in the industrial food system that currently
dominates the world. This system focuses on increasing food production and maximizing profitability at the lowest
possible economic cost at the expense of workers.
“Agricultural workers, including women, children and migrants and plantation workers, are increasingly faced with low
wages, part-time work, informality, and a lack of social and economic protections. They are further faced with dangerous
working conditions owing to regular exposure pesticides and to long hours spent in extreme temperatures without adequate
access to water.”
Ms. Elver recalled that the agricultural sector is one of the world’s most dangerous, with more than 170,000
agricultural workers killed at work each year, the risk of a fatal accident being twice as high as compared with other
sectors.
Migrant workers, in particular, face more severe economic exploitation and social exclusion than other agricultural
workers as they lack the fundamental protections otherwise extended to citizens. The human rights expert explained that
“employers are more likely to consider migrant workers as a disposable, low-wage workforce, silenced without rights to
bargain collectively for improved wages and working condition.”
Elver said that some 108 million children were particularly vulnerable to the dangers of agricultural work due to
insufficient risk prevention and lack of control measures. Over 70 percent of the child labour workforce is deployed in
the broader agricultural sector.
“Labour rights and human rights are interdependent, indivisible, and mutually inclusive”, the expert added. The full
enjoyment of human rights and labour rights for agricultural workers is a necessary precondition for the realization of
the right to food.”
States bear the primary duty to respect, protect and fulfill the right to food of agricultural workers under
international human rights law and to regulate the national and extraterritorial behaviours of the private sector.
“It is time for States to step up, and take swift and urgent action to hold accountable those who commit human rights
violations against agricultural workers and to prevent further violations”, the expert concluded.