"Labor trafficking is so preventable in this country, that’s why it’s all the more outrageous that it’s still existing. Because there is actually a solution, it is very clear. To end slavery, to end human trafficking, you have to end sweatshops. If the big buyers, the major corporate buyers, if they were to say “We don’t ever want to see modern day slavery again in our supply chain,� it would disappear."
Laura Germino
Anti-Slavery Campaign Coordinator
Coalition of Immokalee Workers
Some human trafficking experts and human rights activists believe there is a connection between the US fast food industry and modern slavery in the United States.
In March of this year the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, a farm worker group based in Immokalee Florida, came to Chicago to launch a national campaign against McDonald's. Chicago is home to McDonald’s corporate headquarters.
The Coalition of Immokalee Workers has helped free over 1000 people held in peonage, forced labor, debt bondage and conditions of trafficking in the United States.
This year the CIW was awarded the Paul Wellstone Award by the Freedom Network USA for their efforts to combat human trafficking in the United States.
In 2003 Julia Gabriel, Lucas Benitez and Romeo Ramirez of the CIW were the first US recipients of the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award. Per the RFK Human Rights Award’s web site “Farm workers themselves, they [Gabriel, Benitez, and Ramirez] have become leaders in the fight to end slave labor, human trafficking and exploitation in agriculture fields across the U.S.�
This is an
audio documentary of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers' visit to Chicago.

