Trade Aid - Making a World of Difference
Child labour and Chocolate
     

Do you remember the ICI (International Cocoa Initiative)? This is the body that was set up in 2001 which promised to deliver the Harkin-Engel protocol, with a clear aim to eradicate child slavery from the chocolate industry and establish certification on all farms by 2005. They failed. They announced another deadline of 2008 and reduced the definition of certification to handling and collecting data. We will watch closely to see whether the chocolate industry will finally admit that their process is not working and that they cannot keep delaying clear action to eradicate this crime leaving thousands of children caught today in this horrific life.
extract from http://www.stopthetraffik.org/

childslavery.gif

"It is estimated that there were
some 211 million children aged
5 to 14 at work in economic
activity in the world in 2000."    
International Labour Organisation

Their rules or ours?
Despite the disturbing reality, chocolate which is often the product of forced child labour is still available in New Zealand. We have laws to protect our own children, but seem unwilling to legislate against the inhumane practise of child labour in other countries.  World Trade Organisation rules are very strict in this sense and the grounds under which import restrictions may be imposed are very limited under this regime. However, as a proudly independent democracy, Trade Aid believes it is time for the New Zealand government to take a stand on this issue. In this situation, encouraging adherence with basic human rights worldwide must take priority over our involvement in the WTO. Media Release Easter 2006

Cocoa companies in court over child labour abuse claims
A leading human rights organization and reputable civil rights firm filed suit against the Nestle, Archer Daniels Midland, and Cargill companies today in Federal District Court in Los Angeles. The complaint alleges their involvement in the trafficking, torture, and forced labor of children who cultivate and harvest cocoa beans which the companies import from Africa. The suit was brought under two federal statutes, the Torture Victims Protection Act and the Alien Tort Claims Act
July 14 2005 -
read more here

How sweet really is your chocolate?
Trade Aid is asking why a civilised country in the 21st century is condoning practices that were outlawed in the 19th century. While we have laws to protect our children in this country, Trade Aid says that buying goods made by forced child labour in another country is still an endorsement of those practices. Trade Aid is looking to Parliament to make such  practices illegal. In the meantime it is promoting its fair trade chocolate made from cocoa from Ghana where no children are used and farmers receive a fair wage for their work.
Media Release Valentines Day 2006

As New Zealanders shouldn’t we have the right to know that our chocolate is as sweet as the image? Don’t we deserve the right to choose a chocolate free from child trafficking and torture? Chocolate by any other name just wouldn’t be as sweet.
Media Release Valentines Day 2006

Just In Time for Valentine’s Day: Nestle Taken to Court for Trafficking, Torture, and Beatings of Child Laborers on West African Cocoa Farms
Human rights groups have long criticized the chocolate industry for failing to stop illegal child labor, including child slavery, on West African cocoa farms, but this is the first time the issue is going to court. The charges against the companies include trafficking, torture, and forced labor of children who cultivate and harvest cocoa beans, which the companies import from Africa.
Media Release February 3 2006

Nestle and Child Labour
Nestlé’s Golden Ticket competition is making dreams come true for five lucky children in New Zealand, but the sweet front of the chocolate industry conceals a nightmarish reality for millions of children in West Africa. While Nestlé take advantage of the forthcoming New Zealand release of the movie, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, a US lawsuit has been filed alleging Nestlé’s involvement in the trafficking, torture and forced labour of children who cultivate and harvest the cocoa that Nestlé imports from West Africa.
Oxfam media release September 02, 2005

Related article: Nestle becomes the first Multi National to produce a Fairtrade coffee product in the UK. For more on Nestle and its FLO labelling see World Watch Archives

The chocolate industry has acknowledged that child slaves are harvesting cocoa in Cote d'Ivoire
[A good update on the situation as it stands today]
Child labor and fair trade advocates raised a number of questions about progress toward monitoring, certification and the elimination of child labor... Unfortunately, none of the representatives on hand were able to answer these fundamental questions...
http://www.laborrights.org/projects/childlab/cocoa_063004.htm

All you ever wanted to know about the child slave trade
International Labour Rights Fund Press and Articles

There is a surprising association between chocolate and child labor in the Cote d'Ivoire.
Young boys whose ages range from 12 to 16 have been sold into slave labor and are forced to work in cocoa farms in order to harvest the beans, from which chocolate is made, under inhumane conditions and extreme abuse...

...By 2005, the chocolate industry plans to establish a system that publicly certifies cocoa as not having been produced by children, using a process that traces from where cocoa is supplied (Chocolate Manufacturers Association, "Signed Protocol").
http://www.american.edu/TED/chocolate-slave.htm

Chocolate industry unlikely to meet US child abuse deadline
Abidjan: Child workers are still being exploited in West African cocoa fields and the chocolate industry's efforts to stop the abuse are not sufficient to meet a July 2005 deadline, humanitarian and labour activists say.
The Mercury, South Africa July 12, 2004
http://www.globalexchange.org/campaigns/fairtrade/2184.html

Helping “At-Risk” Children
Efforts to develop credible “certification” standards for cocoa farming labor practices are moving quickly, with the test of a first-ever, wide-scale cocoa farm labor monitoring program in the Cote d’Ivoire and Ghana.
http://www.fhidc.com/cocoa/Vol3/

Meeting the 'chocolate slaves

Child workers are easy to find in cocoa plantations

Chocolatechild.jpg

By Humphrey Hawksley
BBC, Mali

The morning Malian sun was so severe that it cast on the white-washed wall stark shadows of the four children sitting upright and bewildered on a bench. A fan cooled sweat from their faces. Its breeze blew a sheet of paper off the table. One of the children helpfully ran after it and handed it over to the woman looking after them.

"We are like your parents," she told them gently.

"Whatever is here belongs to you."

One of the boys buried his face into his cupped hands, the relief was so great. The oldest was 13. The youngest, 10.

"What happened to you?" I asked.

Kidnap attempt

"I was playing football," said Karim Sadibe.

"This man said I should come with him to the Ivory Coast. He would sign me up for the national team and I would get lots of money and that I shouldn't tell my parents."

Karim went, but luckily was intercepted by police. The man who was to have sold him into slavery - probably for about £50 - melted away. Karim was sent back to Mali, to a centre run by Save the Children Fund, Canada. All of that had taken place within the past week. Next door was 20-year-old Moussa Doumbia. He slipped off a freshly pressed pink shirt to reveal welted scars where he had been made to carry sacks of cocoa until he managed to escape two years ago. At night he slept on the floor in a locked room. He was given food once a day. If he complained, he was beaten. The boys who tried to escape had their feet cut with razors.

"I don't know how one human being can treat another in the way they treated me" he whispered.

Chocolate industry

The answer, put simply, is because the market is there for it - and until recently no one bothered to question the ethics behind it. Unlike wine or coffee, with chocolate you don't know for sure which country the cocoa comes from. The chances are, though, it is the Ivory Coast, which produces almost half the world's cocoa. The British spend four billion pounds a year on chocolate. The British spend £4bn (US$5.9bn) a year on chocolate, yet the big household names, such as Cadbury Schweppes, Mars and Nestle, refuse to speak individually on the thorny issue of child labour. They describe it as an "industry" issue. They say they are setting up a trust foundation and that surveys have been commissioned. They've also signed an international protocol. By July 2005, we should be guaranteed that our chocolate is not produced with child slave labour. At present, no such guarantee exists. How this will be done, though, is not clear. No figures on money and manpower are available. As for the surveys, no one had even gone through the Mali government records, for example, to see how the trafficking takes place.

"The objective of the surveys is to look at what is going on in the field, in the cocoa growing areas themselves, right now," said Bob Eagle, the industry spokesman, put up by the chocolate companies.

"Not to see the children themselves," I ventured.

"I think if we look at the detail and objectives it is very much about what is going on in the villages and towns."

Child labour

So I set off to find out what was going on. A drive of hundreds of miles from the parched bush land of Mali to the lush jungle of Ivory Coast. I had thought that finding child labour would be difficult. I had talked to contacts, gathered phone numbers, spent hours of preparation. In the end, I needed none of it. After a 30 minutes' drive from our hotel in the city of Yammousoukrou along the main road to Sinfra, we turned into a village, drove through, down a dirt track, past a cocoa plantation and saw gangs of children coming towards us. They wore grubby, torn T-shirts and carried machetes, their heads hung in confusion. It was a Wednesday morning. The oldest was 13 years old. The others didn't know their age. The youngest was probably six or seven. As we talked to them, another gang passed us on their way to work. After that a group of women, who saw nothing unusual about child workers. Then their boss turned up, on a bicycle, looking for them. He was only 15 himself.

Tiring work

It turned out the boys were shunted between maize, coffee and cocoa farms - depending on the season. If they were paid, it was the equivalent of a pound a day - between the ten of them.

"We spend all the time bent over in the field," one said.

"It's terrible," said another. "Hot, tiring work."

Ivory Coast produces half the world's cocoa

Down the road to my right was a cocoa farm. In front of me was evidence of the contravention of at least two International Labour Organisation conventions aimed at protecting children from abusive labour and giving them a right to an education. If child labour is so easy to find, the numbers might be in the hundreds of thousands, if not the millions. I gave their names to an official of the Ivory Coast government and told him where we found them. I showed their pictures to the chocolate spokesman, Bob Eagle. There was no sign that any immediate help was on its way to them. Mr Eagle said exploitative child labour was unacceptable in his industry - and reiterated the deadline of July 2005 to end it. But that means, although we know who they are and where they are, they could be working in the farms for at least another three years.

At the centre in Mali, Save the Children Fund says, if the will was there, the problem could be fixed within a month.


   
 
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