Wealthy wine farmers in the Western Cape should hang their heads in shame for paying their labourers a mere R70 for an 11-hour working day (The Times, November 8).
I learned the workers have to pay for their electricity and accommodation - a provision (including farm schools and clinics) that used to be a perk for farm labourers. What happened to consideration and fairness? Has wealth and greed made farmers blind to the fact that labourers are human?
I have always been proud of our South African vineyards and the heritage that has been handed down from generation to generation of wine farmers.
South African wines are well-known all over the world - but at a price paid by the workers. It's a shame the wine industry has a past smudged with a history of paying labourers with alcohol. Today's wages are just as insulting and as bad as slavery.