Those
British Strawberries Are Being Picked by Central Asian Workers
Ten years
after Brexit, most seasonal workers in Britain are from countries such as
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. Without them, agricultural chiefs say, many farms
would fail.
By
Stephen Castle and Aigerim Turgunbaeva
Stephen
Castle reported from the fields near Swanley, in Kent, southern England, and
Aigerim Turgunbaeva from Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/23/world/europe/uk-brexit-seasonal-farm-workers-central-asia.html
June 23,
2026, 12:01 a.m. ET
There
were dozens of strawberry plants to prune, and Shukrat Djuraev was more than
3,000 miles from home, but he was not complaining as he worked his way down a
giant greenhouse tunnel in Kent, in southern England.
“I like
it here,” said Mr. Djuraev, 44, who is from Bukhara in Uzbekistan and is one of
thousands of seasonal workers that British farmers rely on every year to get
their produce into stores. “It’s good working here. It’s very steady and calm.”
Before
Britain quit the European Union, many farm workers came from Eastern Europe.
After Brexit, they lost the right to work in Britain — and many voters assumed,
therefore, that fewer foreign workers would come.
Instead,
10 years after the Brexit referendum, British farmers have filled labor
shortages by turning to a more distant region for seasonal workers, granted
entry on six-month visas: Central Asia.
Immigration
was an animating issue in the Brexit vote, with its promoters promising that
leaving the European Union would allow Britain to “take back control” of the
country’s borders. A decade later, it remains one of the biggest political
pressure points, this time for the governing Labour Party.
One of
the loudest voices behind Brexit, Nigel Farage, and his latest anti-immigration
populist party, Reform U.K., have since become a dominant political force,
leading in opinion polls and making significant gains in recent local
elections. His party’s success has shaken Labour and contributed to the
downfall of Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who announced his resignation on
Monday.
Immigration
is a complicated picture in Britain. In the years after Brexit, net migration
soared, driven by the admission of people fleeing Ukraine and Hong Kong, as
well as of students and their relatives, and professionals eligible under new
rules. It has fallen significantly of late after changes to the regulations.
Regardless of the numbers, Labour and the previous Conservative leadership
vowed to rein in immigration, knowing the political pitfalls of doing
otherwise.
There has
also been a mismatch between perception of migration and the reality of the
country’s needs. Farms across the country say they would be unable to operate
without seasonal workers from abroad, and the mix shifted after Brexit.
In the
early years after the vote, many Ukrainians and some workers from Russia and
Belarus took on seasonal work in Britain. Then war broke out in Ukraine, and
British recruiters, who supply big British farms, started looking farther
afield, landing on the Central Asian countries, where wages were relatively
low.
Mr.
Djuraev appreciates the money he earns at Homefield Farm in Kent, which has
helped him to buy an apartment back home. He is even upbeat about Britain’s
unpredictable weather, though that’s partly because he once worked as an oil
and gas driller in Russia.
“Well,
it’s not Siberia,” he said in Russian with a laugh, recalling his time as a
qualified engineer and technologist working in Nizhnevartovsk and Surgut.
“There, it could be 50 degrees minus.”
Tim
Chambers, chief executive of WB Chambers, the firm that runs Homefield and 25
other farms in the region, said that without his seasonal workers, “it would be
impossible to run the business; I would be losing so much money, I would have
to stop.”
“If you
took away that source of labor I would close immediately — it wouldn’t even
cross my mind — all I could do to survive would be to double or triple my costs
of production,” he added.
Mr.
Chambers can trace his ancestral roots in Kent back to 1640. The family firm he
runs was founded in 1952, and it sends about 3,500 tons of both raspberries and
strawberries to British supermarkets every year.
Even if
some of the packaging on that fruit features the British flag, here in the Kent
countryside, it is the Russian language — widely used in Central Asia — that is
spoken by most of the pickers.
Mr.
Chambers said that in the 1990s his company hired many Britons but that none
were tempted by seasonal work now. Without a permanent, year-round job, they
are unable to obtain credit or a mortgage, he said.
Those
without other work would lose welfare payments while picking fruit and would
then have to reapply for state support when the season ended, making it not
worth the trouble. The system, he said, was so inflexible it was “ridiculous.”
Britain’s
minimum wage is 12.71 pounds, about $16.80, an hour, and seasonal workers are
guaranteed 32 hours of work a week; some can earn about £700 a week, about
$927, or more. By contrast, the average salary in Kyrgyzstan in 2024 was a
little more than £300, or $397, a month.
Previously,
many Central Asian workers left to work in Russia, said Christopher Gerry, a
British academic who is rector of the University of Central Asia, based in
Bishkek, the capital of Kyrgyzstan.
Given the
economic volatility in Russia after the invasion of Ukraine, and reports of
hostility toward Central Asians, Britain has become attractive.
“You’re
looking at a very young population that’s more globally oriented, connected
through Instagram, etc., looking at global labor markets and wanting to speak
English,” Professor Gerry said, referring to the Kyrgyz work force.
Charities
report that some seasonal workers in Britain have been exploited. Because visas
last just six months, unscrupulous employers know that workers will soon have
to leave and be unable to pursue any claim, said Daniyar Abdrakhmanov, who is
from Kazakhstan and who worked on a farm in Northern Ireland.
“Can you
imagine being a person coming to another country — where you don’t know the
language — for the first time?” he said. “Maybe they borrowed money or took
credit in their country and are coming here with debts.” And if a farmer treats
workers badly, he added, “they have to be silent because they don’t want to
lose their job.”
Dora-Olivia
Vicol, chief executive officer of the Work Rights Center, a charity, said, “The
exploitation of seasonal workers that our solicitors see is widespread. It is
systemic, and it is enabled by a visa scheme that ties them to a single
employer, leaving them with nowhere to turn when things go wrong.”
To
workers who have a good experience, the program can open horizons.
Orozbek
Saipidin, who is originally from the Batken region of southwestern Kyrgyzstan,
said in an interview in Bishkek, where he now lives, that the prospect of
working in Britain offered a real opportunity for him and his family. “In six
months, I could change our lives for the better,” he said.
Mr.
Saipidin, 34, said that he had never traveled abroad before and had initially
found his first visit to Britain, five years ago, tough.
“Backs,
arms and legs ached,” he said. “There were days when I would cry in the shower
and curse myself, ‘Why did I come here?’ But after about three weeks I got used
to it. We started earning decent money — 550 to 600 pounds a week.”
Mr.
Saipidin was about to travel to England again in May to work at a farm in
Cornwall, in southwestern England.
In Kent,
David Catt, a partner in Ragstone Ridge, a vineyard, said his grapes were
harvested with the help of a team of Central Asian workers.
“They are
all from Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan,” Mr. Catt said, adding,
“Communicating with them is tricky — you have to physically show them what to
do — because my Russian is not too hot, to be honest.”
It was,
Mr. Catt noted, just one of the consequences of Brexit.
“It’s
just the way things are now,” he said. “When we were in Europe, it was so easy
because labor could come and go as it suited.”
Stephen
Castle is a London correspondent of The Times, writing widely about Britain,
its politics and the country’s relationship with Europe.



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