The real impact of unfair trade
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Date: September, 2002
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Kathryn
Bracewell. Photo:
Christian Aid/Adrian Arbib |
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"When
we told the people we met that American cotton farmers get up to four times as
much for their cotton as they do, they laughed in stunned amazement"
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At
12 noon on a Monday I would normally be serving jacket potatoes at our church
drop-in centre, so at 12 noon today I have to keep pinching myself as Im
sitting in the strong sunlight, among 100 cotton farmers.
It is the first of two days in villages, talking to the farmers about what
life is like for them and we discover that it is beginning to look extremely
grim. Right across Mali bad rains mean the cotton harvest will be severely
reduced this year. And on top of that, cotton prices are at an all-time low. One
of the reasons for this is the subsidised production in the United States. When
we told the people we met that American cotton farmers get up to four times as
much for their cotton as they do, they laughed in stunned amazement. We
didnt think it was possible to receive as much as that, one man said.
As we sit listening to cotton farmers telling their life stories, I
find myself sobered by the realisation that unjust world structures have a direct
effect on the person sitting opposite me a cotton farmer who only wants
and deserves a fair price for the cotton he works so very hard to produce.
It really has been an incredible time so far hard work, no doubt about
that listening, learning, trying to take it all in. We almost feel like
detectives too, trying to piece together all the bits of information about how
the cotton industry works. And to cap it all I end up sleeping in the
open air! Chilly but fun. Read
third diary entry |