Baja farmworkers’ strike
Striking farmworkers in Baja California march by the thousands along the Baja Trans Peninsular Highway near San Quintin, Mexico, in a peaceful but angry show of force after growers refused to meet their demands to boost wages.
(Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times)A Mexican farmworkers’ strike is coming close to stopping the harvest at the height of the season.
Amid the glow of late-night warming fires in San Quintin, Mexico, on Wednesday night, striking farmworkers listen to an announcement about a long protest march planned for the next day.
(Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times)About an hour before dawn Thursday, a farmworker watches state police cars drive along the Baja Trans Peninsular Highway and a makeshift encampment in San Quintin, Mexico. Officials were on edge before thousands of laborers gathered for a protest march.
(Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times)Bearing a flag that reads, “We are workers, not slaves,” striking farmworkers sprint past a pickup of fellow laborers during a 12-mile protest march to San Quintin, Mexico.
(Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times)With coastal fog hanging over the rich farmland in San Quintin, Mexico, marching farmworker families chant slogans about respect, dignity and a living wage they hope will be forthcoming as the Baja labor strike goes into its second week.
(Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times)Farmworker leader Fidel Sanchez greets a crowd of thousands as he walks to a meeting with agribusiness bosses who are not meeting the wage demands of striking laborers in San Quintin, Mexico. The 2-week-long strike has crippled produce exports to the U.S. and shows no signs of ending. Growers have offered a 10% raise to workers who earn about $10 a day.
(Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times)