Foreign Policy Blogs

CNN Report: Where Did You Get Your Chocolate?

Here is something timely for you: a CNN special report on chocolate and where it comes from.  It’s very interesting.  Let me know what you think!

http://thecnnfreedomproject.blogs.cnn.com/2011/04/06/the-dark-side-of-chocolate/?hpt=C2

From CNN’s website:

“CNN’s Richard Quest talks to filmmaker U. Roberto Romano, whose documentary “The Dark Side of Chocolate” investigates child labor and cocoa fields in the Ivory Coast.

Read a statement from the Global Chocolate and Cocoa Industry |
From the International Cocoa Initiative

But before you bite into a chocolate bar or take a sip of hot cocoa, consider, where did it come from?

It may be that the treat is the product of someone else’s hard labor. The person who may have sold it or who may have made it may not even be an adult.

The International Labour Organization estimates between 56 and 72 million African children work in agriculture, many in their own family farms. The seven largest cocoa-producing countries are Indonesia, Nigeria, Cameron, Brazil, Ecuador, the Ivory Coast and Ghana. Those last two together account for nearly 60 percent of global cocoa production.

And right now, you can still find children working in the cocoa fields as Romano and his crew did to film “The Dark Side of Chocolate.”

So, what should you as a consumer do?

“I’d like you to buy either a fair trade chocolate or a direct trade chocolate,” Romano says. “I’d like you to buy something where you, as a consumer, can vote responsibly for better treatment of these farmers. And also with fair trade, you know that they’re going to be at least on the road to being paid a decent wage. And with the inspections that go on, you know that their children aren’t working and are getting an education.” “

Also, visit this link for an interview with the managing director of fair trade Divine Chocolate.

 

Author

Crystal Huskey

Crystal Huskey is a freelance writer, musician and fair trade arts consultant. She has a B.A. in religion and will graduate with her M.A. in international relations in the spring of 2012. She is passionate about human rights and gender equality.

Growing up as the daughter of missionaries to refugee communities has given Huskey a heart for the outcasts and brokenhearted. She believes that much of the world's crime can be prevented by creating economic opportunities at every level of society.