Last night I watched a BBC documentary on ABC Australia's "Four Corners" program. It was about an issue I knew little about - the selling of very young children into slavery to harvest cocoa beans in Africa.
http://www.abc.net.au/4corners/content/2010/s2885745.htm
The documentary reported that few chocolate bars displayed Fairtrade stickers, and that even those that do may well be sourcing their cocoa from non-Fairtrade farms.
My question is this. If I were to boycott all non-Fairtrade chocolate and urged everyone I know, including those on the forum, to do the same, would that do anything for the plight of these young slaves or would it result in their fate being even grimmer (if that's possible) as their bosses' income is reduced?
http://www.abc.net.au/4corners/content/2010/s2885745.htm
Cocoa beans are the basic ingredients of chocolate. They are one of the most heavily traded commodities in the world. In Europe, major chocolate makers have signed up to Fairtrade programs, claiming some of their products are made without abusive labour practices. Now the BBC's Paul Kenyon, posing as a cocoa bean buyer, puts those claims to the test, revealing that despite Fairtrade's best efforts unscrupulous cocoa suppliers still try and cheat the system.
The documentary reported that few chocolate bars displayed Fairtrade stickers, and that even those that do may well be sourcing their cocoa from non-Fairtrade farms.
My question is this. If I were to boycott all non-Fairtrade chocolate and urged everyone I know, including those on the forum, to do the same, would that do anything for the plight of these young slaves or would it result in their fate being even grimmer (if that's possible) as their bosses' income is reduced?
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