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ALBERTO TORRES NAVARRO

PRASASTI CHANDRA ABADI


ANNE WIJNBERGEN

SUMMARY

Slave traders are trafficking boys ranging from the age of 12 to 16 from their home countries
and are selling them to cocoa farmers in West Africa. They work on small farms across the
countries, harvesting the cocoa beans day and night, under inhumane conditions.
The horrendous conditions under which children must toil on the cocoa farms of the West Africa
are even more jarring when the facts are juxtaposed with the idea that much of this cocoa will
ultimately end up producing something that most people associate with happiness and pleasure:
chocolate. The connection serves to illustrate that the existence of misery in one part of the
world and joy in another part are no longer divorced as nations are connected together in a
globalized web of trade.
In addition to the very illegality of trafficking and hiring children workers, the implicated cocoa
farmers subject the children to inhuman living conditions. Besides overworking them, the
farmers do not pay the children nor feed them properly-often times they are allowed to eat corn
paste as their only meal. The denigration also includes locking the children up at night to
prevent escape. Although it is only one of many occurrences of bonded labor.
A English channel made a documental complaining this situation and showing that the largest
American cocoa companies buy this cocoa beans.
In 2001, a plan initiated by the U.S.'s Chocolate Manufacturers Association which is called the
Harkin-Engel Protocol, and it will be implemented with the support and cooperation of the US
and foreign governments and various NGOs around the world. The plan's goal is to conform to
the ILO Convention 182 in establishing mechanisms to end the worst forms of child labor.
(Chocolate Manufacturers Association). In the first step of the plan, the industry implemented a
formal survey conducted under USAID to examine the pervasiveness of child slavery in the
West African region.

In 2005 this plan didnt work because is to complicate controlling all the cocoa, there are more
than 1.000.000 of cocoa farmers and the price of cocoa is reduced more and more.

QUESTIONS

1. What are the systemic, corporate, and individual ethical issues raised by this case?
The case Slavery in the Chocolate Industry discusses labor exploitation in the chocolate
industry. It specifically addresses the cocoa beans grown on farms in West Africa,
especially the Ivory Coast and Ghana, which make up close to half of the worlds
chocolate. The cocoa farmers of these nations, however, often rely on slaves to harvest
their beans, and in some cases, enslavement of young males .The systemic ethical issues
raised by this case include economical, political, and legal questions. Let us first look
at the economical repercussions. Would it be economically logical not to do any
business with these countries? The answer is no, considering close to half of the
worlds chocolate is made from the cocoa beans that are grown in the Ivory Coast and Ghana.
If we were to refuse to do any business with these countries or the people associated with these countries,
the costs of the products may be un-affordable to consumers. As far as political issues, Im
sure were not the only country who does business with these other countries, and if we
stop doing business with the ivory coast and Ghana the other countries that also do
business with them may stop doing business with us. The last systematic issue raised is
legal. Slavery on the farms is in illegal in the Ivory Coast. Whether it is or how
well the laws are enforced is for the most part out of our control
2. In your view, is the kind of child slavery discussed in this case absolutely wrong no
matter what, or is it only relatively wrong, if one happens to live in a society that
disapproves of slavery?
I feel slavery of any kind is wrong whether the society approves or disapproves of it.
However, throughout history slavery has been a common practice of most societies
across the world. If the young boys in this case had been treated better, for example
better working conditions, better sleeping conditions, better living conditions, and better
treatment in general would this article ever have appeared? Probably not, I think the
major moral issue here is the treatment of the boys and kidnapping them from different
places and making them work rigorously against their will. Again kidnapping is
violation of law
3. Who share in the moral responsibility for the slavery occurring in the chocolate
industry? Chocolate companies? Farmers? Distributors? Consumers?

In conclusion. I believe there are multitude of people and groups that share the moral
responsibility for slavery occurring in the chocolate industry. While slavery is most
prominent in West Africa because they are the leading exporter of cocoa beans, slave labor
exists in many of the world s agricultural sectors (Chocolate and slavery: child labor in Cote dIvoire,
2002).Through the various trade relations, many people are inevitably implicated in this
problem, whether it is the Ivory Coast Government, the farmers, the chocolate
manufacturers, or consumers who both knowingly and unknowingly buy chocolate
(Chocolate and slavery: child labor in Cote dIvoire,2002). Many groups are responsible for
the depredations against these children, but without question, the people most able to end
their sufferings are chocolate manufacturers and government officials. As you will learn,
however, the chocolate industry in general has done little to eliminate the slavery in its
supply chain, and, indeed, has played a central role in creating and perpetuating it. The
politicians, meanwhile, are all talk and no walk. Unfortunately, it seems that the industry
will continue its evil ways, and lawmakers will continue to let them, so long as there is no
public outcry against them. This is one way to tell them. Another way is by not buying their
tainted products. Sadly, most businesses only understand one thing profit and chocolate
makers are no exception. Encourage the small, but burgeoning, market in chocolate thats
exploitation-free, while hitting the slavery-exploiting companies where it hurts in
their pocketbooks.

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