Times Standard (Eureka)

Palm oil industry tied to Girl Scout cookies

- By Robin McDowell and Margie Mason

They are two young girls from two very different worlds, linked by a global industry that exploits an army of children.

Olivia Chaffin, a Girl Scout in rural Tennessee, was a top cookie seller in her troop when she first heard rainforest­s were being destroyed to make way for ever-expanding palm oil plantation­s. On one of those plantation­s a continent away, 10-year-old Ima helped harvest the fruit that makes its way into a dizzying array of products sold by leading Western food and cosmetics brands.

Ima is among the estimated tens of thousands of children often working alongside their parents in Indonesia and Malaysia, which supply 85% of the world’s most consumed vegetable oil. An Associated Press investigat­ion found most earn little or no pay and are routinely exposed to toxic chemicals and other hazardous conditions. Some never go to

school or learn to read and write. Others are smuggled across borders and left vulnerable to traffickin­g or sexual abuse.

The AP used U. S. Customs records and the most recently published data from producers, traders and buyers to trace the fruits of their labor from the processing mills where palm kernels were crushed to the supply chains of many popular kids’ cereals, candies and ice creams sold by Nestle, Unilever, Kellogg’s, PepsiCo and many other leading food companies, including Ferrero — one of the two makers of Girl Scout cookies

Olivia, who earned a badge for selling more than 600 boxes of cookies, had spotted palm oil as an ingredient on the back of one of her packages, but was relieved to see a green tree logo next to the words “certified sustainabl­e.” She assumed that meant her Thin Mints and Tagalongs weren’t harming rainforest­s, orangutans or those harvesting the orange-red palm fruit.

But later, the whip-smart 11-year- old saw the word “mixed” on the label and quickly learned it meant exactly what she feared: Sustainabl­e palm oil had been blended with oil from unsustaina­ble sources. To her, that meant the cookies she was peddling were tainted.

Thousands of miles away in Indonesia, Ima led her class in math and dreamed of becoming a doctor. Then her father made her quit school to help meet his high company targets on the palm oil plantation where she was born. Instead of attending fourth grade, she squatted in the unrelentin­g heat, snatching up the loose kernels littering the ground.

She sometimes worked 12 hours a day, wearing only flip flops and no gloves, crying when the fruit’s razor- sharp spikes bloodied her hands or scorpions stung her fingers. The loads she carried went to one of the very mills feeding into the supply chain of Olivia’s cookies.

“I am dreaming one day I can go back to school,” she told the AP.

Child labor has long been a dark stain on the $65 billion global palm oil industry, identified as a problem by rights groups, the United Nations and the U.S. government.

With little or no access to daycare, some young children in both countries follow their parents to the fields. In some cases, an entire family may earn less in a day than a $5 box of Girl Scout Do-si-dos.

“For 100 years, families have been stuck in a cycle of poverty and they know nothing else than work on a palm oil plantation,” said researcher Kartika Manurung, who has published reports detailing labor issues on Indonesian plantation­s.

The AP’s investigat­ion into child labor is part of a broader in-depth look at the industry that also exposed rape, forced labor traffickin­g and slavery. Reporters

crisscross­ed Malaysia and Indonesia, speaking to more than 130 current and former workers — some two dozen of them child laborers — at nearly 25 companies.

Indonesian government officials said they do not know how many children work in the country’s massive palm oil industry. But the U. N.’s Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on has estimated 1.5 million children between 10 and 17 years old labor in its agricultur­al sector. Palm oil is one of the largest crops, employing some 16 million people.

In much smaller neighborin­g Malaysia, a newly released government report

estimated more than 33,000 children work in the industry there — nearly half of them between the ages of 5 and 11. That report did not directly address the tens of thousands of so- called “stateless” boys and girls living in the country with parents who came from bordering countries.

An official from Malaysia’s Ministry of Plantation Industries and Commoditie­s did not respond to repeated requests for comment, but Nageeb Wahab, head of the Malaysian Palm Oil Associatio­n, called allegation­s of child labor very serious and urged complaints to be reported to authoritie­s.

 ?? BINSAR BAKKARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A child carries palm kernels collected from the ground across a creek at a palm oil plantation in Sumatra, Indonesia.
BINSAR BAKKARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A child carries palm kernels collected from the ground across a creek at a palm oil plantation in Sumatra, Indonesia.
 ?? MARK HUMPHREY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Olivia Chaffin, 14, is seen in Jonesborou­gh, Tenn. Olivia is asking Girl Scouts across the country to band with her and stop selling cookies, saying, “The cookies deceive a lot of people. They think it’s sustainabl­e, but it isn’t.”
MARK HUMPHREY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Olivia Chaffin, 14, is seen in Jonesborou­gh, Tenn. Olivia is asking Girl Scouts across the country to band with her and stop selling cookies, saying, “The cookies deceive a lot of people. They think it’s sustainabl­e, but it isn’t.”

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