San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Groups critical of Malaysian forced labor

- By Peter Whoriskey WASHINGTON POST

Palm oil is common in U.S. diets, but it lives in obscurity: Big food manufactur­ers add it to a substantia­l portion of packaged foods — it’s in Skittles and Milky Ways, for example — but the name may be familiar only to those who read labels.

Now, though, palm oil is getting attention. One of the world’s largest palm oil producers, a Malaysian company dogged by persistent allegation­s that it subjects migrant workers to forced labor, is facing legal petitions from two groups that want customs officials to block the company’s palm oil from entering the United States.

Citing reports from the U.S. Department of Labor, academics and watchdog organizati­ons, the groups say the Malaysian company, FGV Holdings, and its contractor­s lured migrants to plantation­s and subjected them to “slave-like” conditions. According to the complaints, the migrants have been ensnared in debt, forced to give up their passports, forbidden from leaving the FGV farms and compelled to sign contracts in languages they don’t understand.

Some of the world’s largest food companies have been supplied with palm oil from the company, which employs 20,000 or more migrants on Malaysian farms that spread over more than 800,000 acres. Procter & Gamble, Mars, Nestle, Hershey, Pepsi and Mondolez have been listed as customers of FGV or FGV-affiliated mills.

“What’s appalling is how long this has been going on and how many times FGV has been asked to address this problem,” said Judy Gearhart, executive director of the Internatio­nal Labor Rights Forum, one of three nonprofit groups that filed a petition Thursday morning. “The companies buying palm oil from FGV have known about these problems since 2015. Yet these people are still trapped and living under conditions of forced labor.”

For the chocolate companies, the petitions mark the second key ingredient facing possible government restrictio­ns based on labor abuses. With the urging of two U.S. senators, customs officials already are reviewing whether cocoa from Ivory Coast, the world’s largest producer, should be blocked from entering the United States because of pervasive child labor.

The palm oil petition filed on Thursday with U.S. Customs and Border Protection follows another filed this summer that also was aimed at blocking FGV palm oil from entering the United States.

The first petition was filed in June by the ESG Institute, an outfit affiliated with a law firm, Grant & Eisenhofer. That petition cited evidence that FGV had exploited victims of traffickin­g, subjected the migrants to violence and failed to provide the workers with adequate food and housing. It also said there might be child labor on FGV plantation­s.

FGV officials denied using child labor but did not specifical­ly dispute the other allegation­s in the first petition. It said it was enacting reforms to “correct the situation.” “We expect to correct all charges in respect of human rights abuses and violations … within the given deadline,” FGV chairman Azhar Abdul Hamid wrote in a January letter to shareholde­rs.

The company said that in the future plantation workers would be allowed to come and go from company premises and that foreign workers would be given the option of returning to their home countries.

The company said, however, that it would not soon give up its system of hiring migrant workers through contractor­s, a practice that critics say leaves the company vulnerable to the deceptive hiring practices that can lead to debt bondage and forced labor.

“We are committed to ensure respect for human rights,” said Nurul Hasanah Ahamed, head of group sustainabi­lity at FGV Holdings. “We are very serious in handling this.”

Their critics, however, said the abuses have not ceased.

“We have reports from people on the ground — from this year — that this is still happening,” said Deborah Elman a director at Grant & Eisenhofer.

“They were hit with these allegation­s in 2015. and four years later and they’re still saying we’re making progress,” Gearhart said. “That’s not enough.”

Palm oil, a vegetable oil derived from the fruit of the African oil palm tree, winds up in a lot of U.S. foods: cookies, crackers, chocolate, cereals, breakfast bars, cake mixes, doughnuts, potato chips and margarine. Sometimes it is used as a substitute for other fat, sometimes as a means of extending shelf life.

It has become increasing­ly popular with food manufactur­ers and consumers because it does not contain “trans fats,” which have been linked to coronary heart disease.

At the same time, the growing palm oil farms, most of them in Indonesia and Malaysia, have drawn repeated charges that they have been irresponsi­bly eradicatin­g tropical forests and abusing migrant workers, often by confiscati­ng their passports and limiting their ability to leave the farms.

All of the major food companies say they take steps that ensure that their palm oil has been responsibl­y sourced.

A Hershey official said the company has instructed their suppliers to eliminate FGV palm oil from their supply chain.

Company officials at Mars and Nestle said they buy FGV palm oil through their suppliers, though not directly from FGV. Both companies said they have asked for FGV to address the complaints.

A representa­tive of Cargill, which supplies many food companies, said the company buys some palm oil from FGV-affiliated mills but does not bring that palm oil into the United States.

Officials with Procter & Gamble, Pepsi and Mondolez did not respond to requests for comment on this story.

 ?? Joshua Paul / Bloomberg ?? These are Nigerian palm trees at the Malaysian Palm Oil Board palm oil plantation in Kluang, Johor, Malaysia.
Joshua Paul / Bloomberg These are Nigerian palm trees at the Malaysian Palm Oil Board palm oil plantation in Kluang, Johor, Malaysia.

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