From The Tico Times, San Jose - Costa Rica, April 16, 2015
Costa Rica banana workers affected by Nemagon still waiting on compensation
Article by: Alberto Font
Banana workers affected by the pesticide Nemagon protest outside Costa
Rica’s Legislative Assembly on Wednesday, April 15, 2015. |
Hundreds of banana workers who were exposed to the banned pesticide Nemagon
protested Wednesday in front of Costa Rica’s Legislative Assembly demanding
compensation for physical and psychological damages.
From 1967 to 1979, thousands of workers in banana fields owned by foreign
companies in Costa Rica and across Central America were exposed to the
nematocide Nemagon, also known as DBCP, a chemical that has been proven to cause
myriad health problems including sterility, cancer, miscarriages and genetic
deformities. Costa Rica banned the importation of the chemical in 1979.
Although a law has been on the books since September 2001 promising compensation
for the former banana workers, and a decree by President Luis Guillermo Solís
was published in the government newspaper La Gaceta in December 2014, hundreds
of workers still haven’t received payments.
“We want a pension and fair compensation,” reads a sign held by
protesters on April 15, 2015 in San José, Costa Rica. |
“It looks like they are waiting for us to die,” said José Carlos Madriz, a
banana worker from Batán, a town in the province of Limón, who worked with the
Standard Fruit Company from 1967 to 1973.
“We are suffering from severe health problems and we want to get the money we
deserve,” added Miguel Arguedas, who also worked for the Standard Fruit Company.
Protesters are demanding ₡5 million ($9,400) each, plus a monthly pension of
₡300,000 ($565).