Connecticut Post

Girl Scouts call on cookie bakers to address child labor

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Girl Scouts of the USA said Wednesday that child labor has no place in its iconic cookies and called on the two companies that bake them to act quickly to address any potential abuses linked to the palm oil in their supply chains.

The comments were sent in the form of a tweet to Associated Press reporters who released an investigat­ion Tuesday linking Girl Scout cookies and the supply chains of other well-known food brands to an estimated tens of thousands of children who often work unpaid for long hours in hazardous conditions to help harvest palm fruits on plantation­s in Indonesia and Malaysia.

“Child labor has no place in Girl Scout Cookie production,” the Girl Scouts tweeted. “Our investment in the developmen­t of our world’s youth must not be facilitate­d by the under-developmen­t of some.”

The Girl Scouts also referred to a not-for-profit global organizati­on it belongs to called the Roundtable on Sustainabl­e Palm Oil, which promotes ethical production, including the treatment of workers, writing: “If certain suppliers are not following ethical practices, we expect our bakers and RSPO to take action quickly to rectify those exceptions.”

The Girl Scouts had not responded to repeated requests from the AP for comment about the findings ahead of Tuesday’s story, which found many children working in the palm oil industry do not have access to adequate school or healthcare and that some never learn to read or write. The story detailed how others live in fear of being rounded up by police and tossed in detention centers because they were born on plantation­s to parents who are working illegally, and how girls are vulnerable to sexual abuse.

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