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More than 1.8 million children in West Africa are believed to be working in the cocoa industry |
Global food
giant Nestle says it has taken a major step to end child labour on cocoa farms
supplying its factories.
The firm,
one of the world's largest chocolate producers, says it is going to work with
the Fair Labor Association (FLA) on tackling the problem.
The FLA is
set to examine Nestle's cocoa supply chains in Ivory Coast in January, the firm
said in a statement.
Critics ask
why it has taken Nestle so long to act if it knew children were involved in its
cocoa production.
Nestle and
the world's other biggest chocolate producers signed a cocoa protocol - an
international commitment to end child labour in the cocoa industry - 10 years
ago.
Earlier
this year, a report commissioned by the US government found that the chocolate
industry's funding since 2001 had "not been sufficient" and it needed
to do more.
Nestle, in its statement, said the "cocoa supply chain is long and complex" -
making it "difficult for food companies to establish exactly where their
cocoa comes from and under what conditions it was harvested".
The firm
said the FLA would send a team of independent examiners to Ivory Coast - where
Nestle buys most of its cocoa - to map the supply chain.
The results
of its assessment will be published in the spring of 2012 and will guide future
operations there, the firm said.
"Child
labour has no place in our supply chain," said Jose Lopez, Nestle's
Executive Vice President for Operations.
"We
cannot solve the problem on our own, but by working with a partner like the FLA
we can make sure our efforts to address it are targeted where they are needed
most".
'Moral
obligation'
The US
government-backed report by Tulane University, published in March, found that
more than 1.8 million children in West Africa were involved in growing cocoa.
Earlier
this month, the BBC's Humphrey Hawksley travelled to Ivory Coast and found
children using machetes to hack open cocoa pods to extract the beans.
One boy
told him that he had been sent by his father to the farm to work, and had not
seen his family for three years.
Gilbert
Kone Kafana, Ivory Coast's minister for labour and social affairs, said there
was a "moral obligation" on chocolate companies to help rebuild the
country ravaged by years of civil war.
"We
need to build roads, schools, hospitals and social centres; anything that would
allow Ivory Coast to progress," he told the BBC.
"This
development is necessary for farmers to have a good life, and it is in the
interest of the industry to work with us."
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