The dark side of chocolate
Some 200,000 children work in cocoa plantations in the Ivory Coast. Gretchen Wilson reports on a group of U.S. lawmakers visiting that country to find ways to wean the industry off child labor.
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Doug Krizner: A group of U.S. lawmakers are in West Africa this week. They’re looking at child labor abuses at cocoa plantations.
Ivory Coast is the world’s largest cocoa producing country and the lifeblood of the global chocolate industry, but as Gretchen Wilson reports, that industry depends on child slave labor.
Gretchen Wilson: Both the State Department and UNICEF have documented forced child labor in the Ivory Coast. A report by the International Labor Rights Fund estimates 200,000 children work in that country’s cocoa plantations. The report says many of those kids are used to spread pesticides.
Senators Bernie Sanders and Thomas Harkin and Congressman Eliot Engel toured the plantations this week. They’re setting up a monitoring system to try to reduce slave labor and put the children in school instead, but the transition is complicated since farmers depend on the cheaper wages of children just to stay afloat in the global economy.
Most of the cocoa is used in the U.S. and Europe by multinational firms such as Nestle, M&M/Mars and Hershey’s. Activists want these companies to certify their cocoa products as slave free.
I’m Gretchen Wilson for Marketplace.