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Kenyan farm workers sue James Finlay in a Scottish court

Friday, March 5th, 2021 13:14 | By

Seven farm workers from Kenya are suing one of the world's biggest tea producers for damages in a personal injury court in Scotland.

The tea pickers allege they have suffered severe health problems because of working conditions on farms run by James Finlay Kenya Ltd.

It is part of a multi-national company which can trace its roots back to Glasgow in the 18th Century.

The firm is opposing the action and has defended its health and safety record.

Finlays began as a cotton trader in Scotland in 1750 and now has operations on five continents, with Starbucks among its customers.

The scale of the business is such that it makes enough tea to fuel the annual demand from the whole of the UK.

The company moved its headquarters from Glasgow to London 15 years ago but its registered office address is in Aberdeen, leaving it open to legal action in Scotland's courts.

The seven men and women are suing for damages of £15,000 each in the All Scotland Sheriff Personal Injury Court in Edinburgh.

Their advocate in Kenya, Isaac Okero, says they have suffered injuries including spinal damage.

He told BBC Scotland: "The tea workers are saying that on account of the years of service that they have provided to James Finlays Kenya Ltd, and the circumstances and conditions under which they were compelled to work, they have suffered severe degenerative injuries which have severely impacted on their lives.

"These injuries are both physical and mental.

Mr Okero said a number were still working when the legal action was launched in a city 4,000 miles away but only one is now still in employment.

The others have either been forced into retirement or unable to continue working.

He believes the case will have wider significance.

He said: "It will hopefully compel the company to radically change the conditions under which the workers are working, so these proceedings should result in substantial improvements in the terms and conditions of the employees still picking tea and hopefully bring to an end the prospect of more Kenyan workers suffering severe and long-term injuries in the way that these seven workers have."

Personal injury specialist David Short, from Edinburgh firm Balfour and Manson, is representing the tea pickers.

He said: "In any court action one of the first things you have to look at is, where do we have jurisdiction, which court will allow you to raise an action.

"Here, we have a Scottish-registered company and therefore the appropriate place for action is a Scottish court.

"We're suing for what would be appropriate for an award in Kenya. It reflects their conditions and their economy."

Two years after the case began in 2017, a sheriff ordered Finlays to give the tea pickers' legal team access to the farms in Kenya, allowing them to inspect their working conditions.

Finlays mounted a challenge in the courts in Nairobi, arguing successfully that the Scottish order could not be implemented unless it had been endorsed by a Kenyan court.

The tea pickers appealed against that decision and a judgement is expected in May.

Mr Short said: "They're arguing that it's unconstitutional.

"But even if it is, why won't they let us go in? I suspect it's because they don't want us to see the dreadful conditions that these people work in."

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