Posted on 10/25/2005 12:44:38 AM PDT by nickcarraway
I love chocolate as much as anyone. In moderation, chocolate is good for your body and soul.
But I have a nightmare that this Halloween one of my daughters is going to pull a piece of chocolate out of her candy bag and ask, "Daddy, is it true that child slaves made this chocolate?"
Gulp.
If the chocolate is from one of the major U.S. brands, I'll have to say, "Yes, it's possible, sweetheart. Whether this particular piece of chocolate was made by slaves, it's impossible to tell."
The West African country of Cote d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast) is the world's leading producer of cocoa, the main ingredient in chocolate.
In 1998, a U.S. State Department background report on the country acknowledged the existence of child slavery there. In 2001, Save the Children Canada reported that 15,000 children between 9 and 12 years old, many from impoverished Mali, had been tricked or sold into slavery on West African cocoa farms, many for just $30 each.
This summer, a Birmingham civil rights law firm filed a federal class-action suit against chocolate-maker Nestlé and several of its suppliers on behalf of former child slaves.
The suit's three teenage "John Doe" plaintiffs allege they escaped from Cote d'Ivoire cocoa farms after they were forced to work 12-14 hours a day, six days a week, without pay, given little food, beaten often and guarded at all times. They say some who were caught attempting to escape had their feet cut open or were forced to drink urine.
There seems to be no dispute that "the worst forms of child labor" (code for child slavery) exist in Cote d'Ivoire. The burning question is: How widespread is it? A Cote d'Ivoire government report says 7 percent of child cocoa farm workers it surveyed this year could be forced laborers. But the survey covered only 240 of the 600,000 cocoa farms in the country.
In 2001, after the U.S. House of Representatives voted to study requiring U.S.-sold chocolate be labeled "slave free," the industry agreed to develop a certification system to "identify and eliminate any usage of the worst forms of child labor in the growing and processing of cocoa beans."
This system was supposed to be in place by July. Now the industry says the best it can do is certify half of the world's cocoa farms by mid-2008.
My guess is that with so many tiny farms in remote locations and thousands of middlemen, certifying all cocoa is proving to be a nearly impossible task. Complicating the job is Cote d'Ivoire's political situation: Rebels rule half the country, its government is reportedly one of the most corrupt in the world, and October elections were recently suspended.
So what is a conscientious parent to do this Halloween? Or Christmas? Or Valentine's Day?
I've bought a stash of Fair Trade-certified organic chocolate, most of which is from democratically run co-ops in Ecuador and the Dominican Republic. It costs about 40 percent more than the big-name stuff.
I'll offer to trade this Fair Trade chocolate ounce-for-ounce for all the big-name possibly tainted chocolate my kids collect on Halloween. I'm not sure what I'll do with the questionable stuff. Maybe I'll just throw it away.
Probably my kids will discover what I've learned: You can not only enjoy Fair Trade chocolate with a clear consciencesome of it actually tastes way better.
Meanwhile, I'll root for the chocolate industry to find a way to clean up its act. When that's done, maybe we can figure out how to free the estimated 26.9 million other slaves on the planet today.
David Smith is a Decatur software developer.
"estimated 26.9 million other slaves"
Is this credible?
I hear the French are in charge over there...
I have no idea for a fact, but I would have guessed a lot higher.
No, honey...we only buy chocolate made by adult slaves!
Damn, but thanks for posting this.
What about geriatric-slave chololate? It's an untapped market.
And let us not forget the young adult slave market. We could bundle it with mud wrestling and bum fights and make double on our investment! We'll live like kings!
Is this credible?
As an estimate, it's a crapshoot...especially since those writing gloom-and-doom articles like to skew numbers ridiculously high.
That said, even if it's 10% of that number, it's still a problem...and one the U.N. will do nothing about apart from skimming some profits along the way.
So, after all these years whites are still trying to get Africans to give up slavery.
On Valentine's day, nothing says "I Love You" like a box of chockys created by the bleeding hands of a child who is a slave.
Wait a minute! Didn't America have its first black President in office then, along with the smartest woman in the world as his First Lady? And wasn't the Secretary of State, the National Security Advisor and the Ambassador to the United Nations part of a foreign relations team that did so much to keep America safe and make the world a better place until it all went down the toilet at noon on January 20, 2001?
So what you are saying is you are afraid that your kid will pull a piece of candy from the halloween bag and ask "Daddy, did Natalee Holloway make this chocolate?"
..he better think about the coffee he drinks,the sneakers he wears,the shirt he wears,the shoe laces he ties,the ink his column is written with,...and I didn't even get into China...this guy needs a reality check
Doogle
This article is by the Atlanta Journal Constitution, take it with a grain of salt.
But if the practice of slavery is part of their "culture", and if "multiculturalism" is good, then how can we object?
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