Monday, 11 November 2013

Dirty chocolate

Chocolate. I absolutely love chocolate and therefore can't understand that there are people out there in this world who don't like chocolate. This is beyond my imagination because I really can't resist chocolate - a reason that made me think twice before watching the film "Schmutzige Schokolade II". It's a documentary that shows the Danish journalist Miki Misrati revealing the very bad conditions under which cocoa is harvested for the production of the chocolate we eat every day. 

 

Since it was revealed that the chocolate industry (mainly Nestlé and other big companies) is involved with child slavery in the Ivory coast, the big companies have been trying to clean their image and started campaigns promoting their social projects in cocoa planting regions. They claim to fight trafficking and child labour by building schools, hospitals and providing the workers of cocoa plantations with trainings to become responsible and successful workers at the same time. 

The film shows the Danish journalist trying to visit the Ivory Coast (one of the main cocoa producers) but the embassy refuses his entry until he has an invitation (from the chocolate industry) which turns out to be impossible. That is why Miki travels to Ghana, the neighbouring country, and manages to get a Ghanaian friend of him visiting the already above mentioned social projects in the Ivory Coast. 

Even after the first few minutes of the film it got clear that yes, the chocolate industry TRIES to fight trafficking and child labour by building schools and so on, BUT not successfully. None of the projects chosen to visit by random were really working. There were pictures of the outer walls of school buildings that were built years ago, but then left to go to rack and ruin. Furthermore there were little kids, not older than maybe eight, working with bayonets, something that is forbidden by law. All these projects, praised by the chocolate industry, are for absolutely nothing because the man in the film couldn't find any successful project. 

Although it's nothing new that there is child labour in our world and that there are really bad working conditions for a large number of people in some countries, I got a more than bad feeling after watching the film. It made me again realise that you can't trust in every certificate on a bar of chocolate. Of course a certificate is better than none but you really have to inform yourself about the conditions attached to it.

After having watched the film I'm not going to stop eating chocolate but one thing I know is that even though a Fairtrade chocolate (of course you can't be sure if there is absolutely no child labour, but at least Fairtrade only cooperates with small cocoa farmers and seems trustworthy) may cost a little bit more, but these euro is 100 per cent worth the investment.

 


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