Supermarket pineapple
	Food Inc
[2010 vid] Felicity Lawrence's film about pineapples, directed by Tom Pearson
[2010] Bitter fruit: The truth about supermarket pineapple   
"Pineapples need very large amounts of pesticides, about 20kg of active 
ingredient per hectare per cycle. The soil is sterilised; biodiversity is 
eliminated. Fourteen to 16 different types of treatment are typically needed, 
and many have to be applied several times. They use chemicals that are dangerous 
for the environment and human health."
.....She first suspected a problem in 1995, when her family's health 
deteriorated dramatically after they moved to the village. Then growing numbers 
of locals began reporting unexplained illnesses – diarrhoea, rashes, gastric 
problems, including vomiting blood, pains in bones and headaches, loss of 
vision. Ramirez's university colleagues tested the water, and the tests were 
then verified by international labs.
.....Eventually, 10 years later, the government accepted that residues of 22 
agrochemicals could be detected in the drinking water, among them bromacil, a 
herbicide linked with cancer of the thyroid, liver and kidneys.
....."I now have many chronic illnesses, and so do my children," Nunez told us. 
"It's not fair what's happening to us." She broke down in tears as she explained 
how their campaign to get back decent water had been greeted by officials. "The 
government has labelled us communists for this. The reality is many people are 
sick because of pineapples. We are not communists."
....."Our wages have been slashed. We are in crisis. It's nowhere near enough to 
cover our living costs. We are even struggling to pay for water,"
.....At peak harvest times, the work is long and arduous, both in the field and 
in the pack houses that run 24/7. Pablo Lopez Garcia from Nicaragua had worked 
seven days a week for more than three weeks
.....But everyone who had signed the petition had just been sacked, he told us. 
In 2007, there was a mass sacking, or "liquidaciones", and rehiring at wage 
rates reportedly 40% lower than previously. Union members were rehired only if 
they agreed to give up their affiliation, we were told.
....As a young man, he was one of the many chemical sprayers made sterile by the 
notorious pesticide DBCP when he worked on Dole banana plantations. (As 
compensation for being made infertile, he told us he received $7,500 from the 
company.)
...Workers were too frightened to be identified, but we gathered more evidence 
here of mass sackings and allegations of union-breaking at Del Monte's Finca San 
Peter at the end of last year. We were told a few workers tried to join the 
union to demand higher pay, and after some had been poisoned while spraying 
pineapples with Furadan – one of the most toxic carbamate pesticides, not 
approved for crop use in the EU. Carbamates are nerve poisons. The company 
reaction was "like a bomb going off", one worker said. It was alleged that first 
members were intimidated and threatened. I was shown a notice that was then put 
up in the plantation office announcing that all field workers, around 300 
people, would be sacked in a mass "liquidacion" and rehiring on 7 November. The 
workers were rehired on slightly poorer conditions than before, with the 
exception of union members.
...."They were offered free transport to Siquirres town to renounce their union 
membership. Those who accepted the offer were rehired; those who did not were 
not." One who refused to leave the union found his house burned down shortly 
after.
....pineapples imported from Costa Rica, the UK government's pesticide residues 
committee found 94% of samples contained residues of the fungicide triadimefon, 
a reproductive toxin and suspected hormone disruptor.
