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Doubts about chocolate: U.S. officials investigate whether to block critical cocoa imports

Doubts about chocolate: U.S. officials investigate whether to block critical cocoa imports.

By Peter Whoriskey Washington Post.

A team from U.S. Customs and Border Protection visited agricultural regions of Ivory Coast last week to begin investigating whether cocoa is produced there with forced or indentured child labor and, if so, whether the U.S. should block cocoa imports.

The investigation follows a July letter from two U.S. senators asking customs officials to issue an order blocking cocoa from Ivory Coast from entering the United States unless the shipments are demonstrated to be free of child labor. The West African nation is the world’s largest producer.

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Halloween Candy No Treat for African Kids--Bloomberg News

Halloween Candy No Treat for African Kids Harvesting Cocoa (1)

Posted October 31, 2019

By Teaganne Finn

Self-regulation isn’t stopping African cocoa growers from exploiting child labor to produce some of the chocolate that will end up in the goody bags of American trick-or-treaters tonight, say human-rights groups that are pressing Congress to step in.

Major chocolate companies including Mars Inc., Nestlé SA, and Hershey Co. committed under an international agreement in 2001 to eradicate child labor from their supply chains and develop standards of public certification by 2005.

“It’s all been forgotten about,” said Ayn Riggs, founder of the non-profit Slave Free Chocolate.

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