Imperial Valley Press

Rape, abuses in palm oil fields linked to top beauty brands

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SUMATRA, Indonesia ( AP) — With his hand clamped tightly over her mouth, she could not scream, the 16- year- old girl recalls – and no one was around to hear her anyway. She describes how her boss raped her amid the tall trees on an Indonesian palm oil plantation that feeds into some of the world’s best-known cosmetic brands. He then put an ax to her throat and warned her: Do not tell.

At another plantation, a woman named Ola complains of fevers, coughing and nose bleeds after years of spraying dangerous pesticides with no protective gear. Making just $ 2 a day, with no health benefits, she can’t afford to see a doctor.

Hundreds of miles away, Ita, a young wife, mourns the two babies she lost in the third trimester. She regularly lugged loads several times her weight throughout both pregnancie­s, fearing she would be fired if she did not.

These are the invisible women of the palm oil industry, among the millions of daughters, mothers and grandmothe­rs who toil on vast plantation­s across Indonesia and neighborin­g Malaysia, which together produce 85 percent of the world’s most versatile vegetable oil.

Palm oil is found in everything from potato chips and pills to pet food, and also ends up in the supply chains of some of the biggest names in the $530 billion beauty business, including L’Oréal, Unilever, Procter & Gamble, Avon and Johnson & Johnson, helping women around the world feel pampered and beautiful.

The Associated Press conducted the first comprehens­ive investigat­ion focusing on the brutal treatment of women in the production of palm oil, including the hidden scourge of sexual abuse, ranging from verbal harassment and threats to rape. It’s part of a larger in-depth look at the industry that exposed widespread abuses in the two countries, including human traffickin­g, child labor and outright slavery.

Women are burdened with some of the industry’s most difficult and dangerous jobs, spending hours waist-deep in water tainted by chemical runoff and carrying loads so heavy that, over time, their wombs can collapse and protrude. Many are hired by subcontrac­tors on a day-to-day basis without benefits, performing the same jobs for the same companies for years – even decades. They often work without pay to help their husbands meet otherwise impossible daily quotas.

“Almost every plantation has problems related to labor,” said Hotler Parsaoran of the Indonesian nonprofit group Sawit Watch, which has conducted extensive investigat­ions into abuses in the palm oil sector. “But the conditions of female workers are far worse than men.”

Parsaoran said it’s the responsibi­lity of government­s, growers, big multinatio­nal buyers and banks that help finance plantation expansion to tackle issues related to palm oil, which is listed under

more than 200 ingredient names and contained in nearly three out of four personal-care products – everything from mascara and bubble bath to anti-wrinkle creams.

The AP interviewe­d more than three dozen women and girls from at least 12 companies across Indonesia and Malaysia. Because previous reports have resulted in retaliatio­n against workers, they are being identified only by partial names or nick

names. They met with female AP reporters secretly within their barracks or at hotels, coffee shops or churches, sometimes late at night, usually with no men present so they could speak openly.

The Malaysian government said it had received no reports about rapes on plantation­s, but Indonesia acknowledg­ed physical and sexual abuse appears to be a growing problem, with most victims afraid to speak out. Still, the AP

was able to corroborat­e a number of the women’s stories by reviewing police reports, legal documents, complaints filed with union representa­tives and local media accounts.

Reporters also interviewe­d nearly 200 other workers, activists, government officials and lawyers, including some who helped trapped girls and women escape, who confirmed that abuses regularly occur.

 ?? AP Photo/Binsar Bakkara ?? A female worker walks with a pesticide sprayer on her back at a palm oil plantation in Sumatra, Indonesia, on 2018. Some workers use a yellow paste made of rice powder and a local root as a sunblock.
AP Photo/Binsar Bakkara A female worker walks with a pesticide sprayer on her back at a palm oil plantation in Sumatra, Indonesia, on 2018. Some workers use a yellow paste made of rice powder and a local root as a sunblock.

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