ILRF Cocoa Campaign profile picture

ILRF Cocoa Campaign

Child Labor in the Cocoa Industry- Stop Nestle and Fight for Fair Trade!!

About Me


I edited my profile at MySpaceSupport.com , check out these Myspace Layouts !
Want this badge?

TAKE ACTION NOW!! -Tell Nestle to stop buying cocoa made with child labor-

The Nestle campaign of the International Labor Rights Fund seeks to help the children in Cote D'Ivoire, a country in West Africa, who are being forced to work on farms that grow cocoa (for chocolate) for little or no money in horrible conditions. We want to pressure the Nestle Company to stop using cocoa that is grown on the farms in Cote D'Ivoire that use child labor. We hope our campaign will encourage others to demand that the company use only cocoa grown on plantations that treat their workers well and strengthen efforts to eliminate child labor throughout the cocoa industry.

The fact that child slaves are used in the harvesting of cocoa beans in Cote D'Ivoire, the world's major supplier of cocoa, is undisputed. The US State Department estimates that there are approximately 15,000 children working on cocoa, coffee, and cotton farms in the Cote D'Ivoire. In June 2001, the ILO also reported that trafficked child labor was used in cocoa production in West Africa. Media reports have unveiled stories about boys tricked or sold into slavery, some as young as nine years old, to work on cocoa plantations in Cote d'Ivoire. ILRF has verified these reports through our own independent investigations conducted in 2002 and 2003, and has interviewed children who have escaped from the cocoa plantations.

Cote d'Ivoire is the largest exporter of the world's cocoa beans, providing 43% of the world's supply. The US imports the majority of these cocoa beans, for use in chocolate candy, marketed by such top brands as Nestle, M&M/Mars, and Hershey.


Want this badge?

For more information about what you can do, go to: International Labor Rights Fund

My Interests

Fighting child labor, working for Fair Trade, pressuring Nestle, chocolate, cocoa, candy, Cote D'Ivoire.

I'd like to meet:


People interested in making a difference in the world. I want to meet people who care about other people, and those who are interested in fair trade. This picture is of a young boy raking cocoa beans on a drying rack at a family compound in the Soubré region, Côte d' Ivoire (Ivory Coast). Many Ivorian cocoa farmers would love to send their young children to school, rather than putting them to work to support the family. Economic pressures often deny them this chance.



ILRF Files Lawsuit Against Nestle, ADM, and Cargill for Using Forced Child Labor --July 14, 2005--

ILRF and a 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.

The Washington, DC-based International Labor Rights Fund (ILRF), along with Alabama-based civil rights firm Wiggins, Childs, Quinn & Pantazis, LLC, filed suit on behalf of a class of Malian children who were trafficked from Mali into the Ivory Coast and forced to work twelve to fourteen hours a day with no pay, little food and sleep, and frequent beatings. The three children acting as class representative plaintiffs are proceeding anonymously, as John Does, because of feared retaliation by the farm owners where they worked.

“It is unconscionable that Nestle, ADM and Cargill have ignored repeated and well-documented warnings over the past several years that the farms they were using to grow cocoa employed child slave laborers. They could have put a stop to it years ago, but chose to look the other way. We had to go to court as a last resort,” said ILRF attorney, Natacha Thys. Co-counsel Herman N. (Rusty) Johnson, Jr. of Wiggins, Childs, Quinn & Pantazis agreed. “Our only hope is that this legal action will vindicate the children whose rights were violated, and serve notice that those who oppose freedom, in all forms, will be held accountable,” said Johnson.

Global Exchange, a San Francisco-based human rights group, also joined the Complaint and, along with the former child laborers, filed suit against Nestle, ADM and Cargill under California’s unfair business practice law for false or misleading statements. Global Exchange alleges that to date no effective steps have been taken by the companies to prevent the use of child labor on farms producing cocoa for companies like Nestle, and that these companies have nevertheless led their members and the public to believe otherwise.

Global Exchange also plans to sponsor demonstrations against Nestle in cities all over the U.S. timed with the opening of the film, “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.”

The complaint follows the July 1, 2005 deadline set by a voluntary industry initiative known as the Harkin-Engel Protocol. The Protocol was implemented in an attempt to eliminate the worst forms of child labor in the West African cocoa industry. A key part of the Protocol was an obligation for companies to have in place an independent and credible system of farm monitoring, certification and verification for their suppliers, to ensure no child labor was taking place. In addition, companies were expected to implement credible programs to address the rehabilitation of child laborers. The industry failed to establish such a system by the July 1, 2005 deadline, several years since reported stories of child labor in the West Africa cocoa sector began to appear and three years since the Protocol was announced.


Want this badge?

Music:

TAKE ACTION NOW!! Tell Nestle to stop buying from suppliers who use child labor: Send your letter here

Movies:

Charlie & the Chocolate Factory, Chocolat, Stolen Childhoods

Television:

Television? Imagine being forced to work on a farm harvesting cocoa all day, with no chance to even go to school, let alone watch television or enjoy the comforts of an American home. To see pictures of the lives of children who work on cocoa farms, click on My Pics.

Books:

Chocolate is sweeter when the workers who make it are treated fairly. TAKE ACTION!!! Treat your sweet tooth while fighting against child labor in the cocoa industry by buying fair trade certified chocolate at: www.globalexchange.org/cocoa

Plus, read Carol Off's book Bitter Chocolate: Investigating the Dark Side of the World's Most Seductive Sweet. More information HERE

Check out the official ILRF blog HERE!

Heroes:

Be a Hero: Add a web banner or badge to your website! It will stream traffic to our website and encourage others to take action towards Nestle! Go to: wordofblog.net Search for the word 'labor' and 12 of our badges will come up! Then place the html into your profile to direct people to our action alerts!!

My Blog

Tell Cargill and ADM to Stop Supporting Slavery!

U.S.-based agricultural companies Cargill (whose CEO is Gregory Page -- photo below and right) and Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) (whose CEO is Patricia Woertz -- photo on the left) are currently aggr...
Posted by ILRF Cocoa Campaign on Fri, 04 Apr 2008 09:35:00 PST

Have a Labor-Friendly Valentines Day

..>Have a Labor Friendly Valentine's Day!         FLOWERS On holidays like Valentine's Day, many consumers do not think about the labor behind their flowers.  We have a ...
Posted by ILRF Cocoa Campaign on Wed, 13 Feb 2008 08:23:00 PST

Valentine’s Day Cocoa News

Hey Folks,As we all know, Valentine's Day is a major chocolate-buying holiday.  As a result, there have been a lot of reports lately about the continuing existence of child labor on cocoa farms i...
Posted by ILRF Cocoa Campaign on Tue, 12 Feb 2008 11:56:00 PST

HAPPY HALLOWEEN!

HAPPY HALLOWEEN!  This year, US consumers are expected to spend $2.1 Billion on chocolate, but child labor continues to occur on cocoa farms throughout West Africa.  Here are three simple wa...
Posted by ILRF Cocoa Campaign on Wed, 31 Oct 2007 06:59:00 PST

Sign up for REVERSE TRICK-OR-TREATING!

THIS HALLOWEEN: GO "REVERSE TRICK-OR-TREATING"!Take action on Halloween night to stop child labor in the cocoa industry! Your kids can join schoolchildren across the US who are reversing the Hallowee...
Posted by ILRF Cocoa Campaign on Tue, 16 Oct 2007 08:58:00 PST

This Halloween: Go Reverse Trick-or-Treating!

This Halloween, the kids will be giving treats to the adults!Check out www.ReverseTrickOrTreating.org for more information! On Halloween night 2007, schoolchildren, high school students, college stud...
Posted by ILRF Cocoa Campaign on Fri, 05 Oct 2007 08:46:00 PST

Where in the world is fair trade chocolate?

Have you ever wondered where fair trade cocoa is grown? Well, now you can see exactly where! TransFair USA partnered with Google Earth to map fair trade certified farms throughout the world. Check...
Posted by ILRF Cocoa Campaign on Mon, 10 Sep 2007 11:15:00 PST

Going shopping this week? You can help us out!

Wal-Mart and Big Box Retailers Product Research   Going shopping this week?  You could become an ILRF Researcher.   The International Labor Rights Forum (ILRF) needs your help to l...
Posted by ILRF Cocoa Campaign on Thu, 06 Sep 2007 07:34:00 PST

From the slave trade to free trade

Fahamu and Pambazuka news have just published a new book titled From the slave trade to 'free' trade: How trade undermines democracy and justice in Africa.  The book, edited by Patrick Burnett a...
Posted by ILRF Cocoa Campaign on Wed, 05 Sep 2007 10:03:00 PST

UK Students Take on the Cocoa Industry!

BBC's evening news program, Newsnight, has produced some amazing reports about the continued use of child labor in the chocolate industry in the Ivory Coast. The disturbing reports have inspired stud...
Posted by ILRF Cocoa Campaign on Thu, 05 Jul 2007 01:23:00 PST