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Farm workers demand urgent ban on 67 pesticides

200 farm women have called on authorities to ban hazardous pesticides frequently used on farms affecting their health. The protestors from the Cape Winelands marched in Worcester on Thursday and also requested authorities to hold farmers accountable when they break labour regulations.

In the memo, the Women on Farms Project (WFP) asked the Department of Employment and Labour received and signed by Karen Fuller to 

Denile Samuel, the labour rights coordinator at the WFP, said that farm women have been complaining that farmers are not complying with regulations on protective clothing, are sending workers into the vineyards too soon after spraying pesticides, and are not giving them support when they get sick from pesticide exposure. “For farmers, it’s about profit,” said Samuel.

Samuel said that the campaign started in 2017 when WFP researched pesticides and their impact on women farmworkers. A total of 73% of women farmworkers interviewed said that they did not receive protective clothes from the farmer when working in vineyards sprayed with pesticides.

In 2019 women from WFP marched to Parliament in Cape Town to call for the ban of the 67 pesticides. But further engagements with labour Minister Thulas Nxesi and Western Cape Chief Inspector David Esau were prevented due to the Covid lockdown.

Now WFP wants the meetings to start to discuss the banning of harmful pesticides and the enforcement of labour regulations on farms.

“We also want a toll-free number so that workers will be able to file their complaints,” said Samuel.

Legislation that guides the safety of farmworkers currently is the Occupational Health and Safety Act 85, and about pesticides specifically, the Regulations for Hazardous Chemical Substances. These regulations dictate “the need for personal protective equipment, including respiratory protective equipment” and also the duty of the employers to send a worker for a health evaluation if they are exposed to pesticides.

Christina April, who lives on a farm in Wellington, said that children who live in houses on farms are also exposed to pesticides when they play in the vineyards.

“Many people are getting sick on farms from working on vineyards with pesticides,” said April. She said that farmers often don’t support farm women financially when they need to go to clinics after being exposed to pesticides. “Many people don’t have protective clothing or masks to wear,” she said.

Dina Ndleleni, a farmworker from De Doorns, said that she got ill from pesticide exposure. “I was very sick,” she said. Two members from WFP accompanied her to the doctor and then to the hospital where she was diagnosed with asthma.

David Esau, the Department of Labour’s chief Western Cape Inspector, told GroundUp: “The matters raised in the memorandum have been referred to the national Chief Inspector. The department is prepared to meet with Women on Farms so that we can work together to prepare a program that will look into the health and safety of the workers on the farms with regards to the use of pesticides.”

Andrea Campher, Risk and Disaster Manager at AgriSA, said farmers must ensure that their workers are safe, wearing the necessary protective clothing and following the directions and warnings on the labels of the pesticides. Pesticide use should not be to the detriment of the health of workers or the environment, she said.

She said the Fertilisers, Farm Feeds, Seeds and Remedies Act registered pesticides and allowed for precautions against pesticides.

She said it would be difficult to ban pesticides completely because of the impact on farming. “Green” options should be considered but might take a long time to come onto the market, said Campher.