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A corporate building for Nestle USA is shown in Glendale, California in this photo from Oct. 24, 2015. (Ken Wolter / Shutterstock)
Last month the Nestle company, along with Cargill and Archer Daniels Midland, failed to get the U.S. Supreme Court to throw out a lawsuit holding them liable for the alleged use of child slaves in cocoa farming in the African nation of Ivory Coast.
The high court’s refusal to take up an appeal by the three commercial giants comes after Nestle admitted in 2015 that it had bought materials from Thailand produced on the backs of forced labor. In reporting that it had unknowingly used such products, the company said it was entering a new era of self-policing.
However, a report in The Guardian newspaper on Monday suggests that Nestle’s self-regulating policy may be more a PR campaign than a true effort to have a legal workforce. The article notes that “the company [is] in the unfortunate position of disclosing slavery in one part of its operations, while at the same time fighting through the courts to fend off accusations that it exists in another—more profitable—part of its business.”
Andrew Wallis, chief executive of Unseen UK, an anti-trafficking charity advocating for more supply chain accountability, said: “For me there is a big issue with one part of Nestlé saying, ‘OK we have been dragged along with everyone else to face the issue of slavery in Thailand and so let’s take the initiative and do something about it’, and at the same time fighting tooth and nail through the courts to avoid charges of child slavery in its core operations in the Ivory Coast.”
He argues that Nestlé’s self-reporting could also be seen as a tactic to head off or deflate other pending civil litigation suits.
“It’s easy to own up to something that has already been uncovered,” he says. “By the time Nestlé owned up to slavery in the Thai seafood industry it was accepted knowledge. It’ll be a brave new world when companies are actually doing the real investigation to probe into part of their supply chains that have remained outside the public domain.
In 2014 The Guardian wrote that slave labor was “being used in Asia in the production of seafood sold by major US, British and other European retailers.” The article spoke of workers being subjected to “20-hour shifts, regular beatings, torture and execution-style killings” and added: “Some were at sea for years; some were regularly offered methamphetamines to keep them going. Some had seen fellow slaves murdered in front of them.”
Atrocities like this will not end until consumers refuse to buy the products of the companies responsible.
—Posted by Donald Kaufman.
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