Child labor in palm oil industry tied to Girl Scout cookies

  • 📰 AP
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 169 sec. here
  • 4 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 71%
  • Publisher: 51%

Ireland News News

Ireland Ireland Latest News,Ireland Ireland Headlines

Palm oil is in half the products on supermarket shelves. An invisible army of children work up 12 hours a day -- carrying heavy loads and squatting for hours in the unrelenting heat to harvest the fruit -- instead of going to school.

Indonesian government officials said they do not know how many children work in the country’s massive palm oil industry, either full or part time. But the U.N.’s International Labor Organization has estimated 1.5 million children between 10 and 17 years old labor in its agricultural sector. Palm oil is one of the largest crops, employing some 16 million people.

“It is an issue, and we know it’s an issue,” said Dan Strechay, the RSPO’s global outreach and engagement director, adding that the association has started working with UNICEF and others to educate members about what constitutes child labor. Most people take words like “organic,” “fair trade” and “sustainable” at face value. But not Olivia. She became increasingly worried about palm oil, rifling through the kitchen cupboards in her family’s century-old farmhouse in Jonesborough, Tennessee, to inspect the ingredients printed on cans and wrappers. Then she began digging through her shampoos and lotions, trying to make sense of the scientific-sounding names she saw there.

“Let them enjoy it,” said Abang, a skinny 14-year-old who dropped out of the fifth grade to help his father on an Indonesian plantation and has never tasted ice cream. He has accepted his own fate, but still dreams of a better future for his little brother. It’s a cycle that 15-year-old Jo was trying to break. Even though he had to help his family in the fields each day, heaving palm fruits high over his head and lobbing them onto trucks, his parents let him keep $6 a month to cover school fees so he could attend morning classes.

An official estimate says 80,000 children of illegal migrants, mostly from Indonesia and the Philippines, are living in Sabah alone, but some rights groups say the true number could be nearly double that. Without birth certificates and with no path to citizenship, they are essentially stateless – denied access to even the most basic rights, and at high risk of exploitation.

Many never leave their guarded plantations, some so remote that workers must climb hills to search for a phone signal. And for those who dare to go out, trouble can come quickly. Some companies in Indonesia provide rudimentary elementary schooling on plantations, but children who want to continue their studies may find they have to travel too far on poor roads or that they can’t afford it. In Malaysia, the problem is even bigger: Without legal documents, tens of thousands of kids are not allowed to go to government schools at all.

Many young palm oil workers also have little understanding about reproductive health. Girls working on remote plantations are vulnerable to sexual abuse, and teen pregnancies and marriages are common. She said her son, whose own newborn baby was buried in the adjacent grave, had inherited his father’s job. He is the family’s main breadwinner now.Olivia is not the first Girl Scout to raise questions about the way palm oil makes its way into the beloved American cookies.

Still, for many food and cosmetic companies facing increased pressure from conscientious consumers, the association’s stamp of approval has become the go-to answer when questions are raised about their commitments to sustainability. When contacted by the AP, companies reaffirmed their support of human rights for all workers, with some noting they rely on their suppliers to meet industry standards and abide by local laws. If evidence of wrongdoing is found, some said they would immediately cut ties with producers.

Weston Foods, which owns ABC Bakers, would not provide any information about its palm oil suppliers, citing proprietary reasons, so the AP could not determine if its supply chain was tainted.

 

Thank you for your comment. Your comment will be published after being reviewed.
Please try again later.

So sorry for the children. Btw a lot of people are allergic to coconut and palm oil. Don't put it in your products without a warning

girlscouts please respond

MinhKular 🌴And their Forests, Obliterated as are Wildlife Habitats 🦧🦧.........🌳

abissicus This is why correct and complete ingredients listing on all products is vital

Are we all aware that this is how our US grown cherries, apples, lettuce, etc. is harvested as well?

bUT tRAnsfAtS R baD!!

DavidEggert00 App that identifies palm oil containing products, US/Canada: Although even 'sustainable palm oil' drives demand for unsustainable. Just do your best to avoid altogether.

god what shitty comments here. even if the girl scouts werent rediculous in the first place, its a shock its being unknowingly sold by little kids anyways. thank you ap for your incredible honest reporting i hope you all aint disparaged by all these folks who cant deal with life

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

 /  🏆 728. in İE

Ireland Ireland Latest News, Ireland Ireland Headlines