The Human Cost of Profit: The Plight of Warehouse Piece-Rate Workers in Mombasa

In the heart of Mombasa, behind the towering containers and the hum of cargo cranes, an
invisible workforce labours under conditions that should shame a nation. These are Kenya’s
warehouse piece-rate workers; a segment of the working class whose labour oils the wheels
of global trade, yet whose rights remain systematically violated, their dignity trampled by
corporate greed and state indifference.

This past week, these workers; many of them young, casualised, and without contracts;
downed their tools and rose in collective defiance. For three days, the warehouses stood still.
No cargo moved. No goods were counted. No profits were made. The workers, earning a few
shillings per unit offloaded or item processed, said enough is enough.

These are not isolated grievances. Workers are paid on a piece-rate system that encourages
speed over safety, quantity over wellbeing. The average warehouse worker offloads tonnes of
cargo in harsh conditions, often without protective gear, breaks, or basic medical care. The
pay? As low as KES 300 a day; irregular, unguaranteed, and often withheld.

The target of this strike includes multinational giants like Cargill, a U.S.-based agribusiness
conglomerate and one of the largest privately held corporations in the world. While it rakes in
billions globally, the Kenyan workers in its supply chain live on the brink of starvation.

When workers raised their voices, the response was swift and brutal. Police were deployed to
intimidate. Strikebreakers were threatened. And yet the workers stood firm. As one striker
declared: “They want to treat us like machines. But we are human. We bleed. We sweat. We
feel hunger.”

What we are witnessing is a textbook example of neocolonial indirect imperial hegemony:
foreign firms exploiting cheap African labour, enabled by local intermediaries and protected
by state violence. These workers are not demanding the moon. They demand: A living wage;

Contracts and job security; Protective equipment and safe working conditions; Recognition of
their right to organise.

The working class in Kenya must not watch in silence. This is not just a Mombasa issue. It is
Kisumu. It is Nairobi. It is Eldoret. It is every warehouse, every factory, every EPZ zone
where workers break their backs while CEOs sip imported wine.

The piece-rate system must be abolished. Labour laws must be enforced. And more than that,
the workers must be organised; into trade unions, into councils, into formations that can
negotiate, defend, and if need be, fight.

Let the bosses tremble. Let the warehouses stall. Let the world hear the cry from Mombasa:
“We are not disposable. We are the hands that build this country. And we shall no longer
suffer in silence.”

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