Audio By Carbonatix
Six former child slaves from Mali who accused food producers Nestle SA and Cargill Inc. of aiding and abetting their forced labor in African cocoa fields won a fresh chance at making their case in a U.S. court.
A federal appeals panel in San Francisco on Tuesday overturned a ruling that dismissed the case last year because the foreign plaintiffs had failed to show any U.S. conduct was linked the alleged enslavement. The appeals court pointed to claims that employees based at the companies’ U.S. offices approved off-contract payments of personal spending money to farmers to ensure the low prices made possible by slave labor.
The plaintiffs, who sued over a decade ago, seek to hold the cocoa-buying companies liable for their captivity and mistreatment on farms in neighboring Ivory Coast, the world’s largest producer of the commodity. Nestle and Cargill allegedly turned a blind eye to the practice to benefit from lower prices.
The companies were “well aware” that child slave labor was pervasive in the Ivory Coast, and they had economic leverage that gave them control of cocoa production in the country, the court said. The judges said they took the ex-slaves’ “plausible allegations” as true in analyzing the case; the court didn’t rule on the merits.
After the ruling, the U.S. unit of Vevey, Switzerland-based Nestle said forced child labor is unacceptable and has no place in the company’s supply chain.
Global Problem
“We have explicit policies against it and are working with other stakeholders to combat this global social problem,” the unit said in a statement.
Minneapolis-based Cargill said in a statement that the allegations are false and it’s considering an appeal.
"We will not let these legal proceedings deter us from working actively every day to protect human rights, with an unwavering commitment to treating people with dignity and respect in the workplace and the communities where we do business," Cargill said.
The appeals court said it focused on the conduct alleged to have taken place in the U.S., to comply with the Alien Tort Statute that limits the ability of foreigners to sue in American courts.
Among the alleged actions scrutinized by the court were the companies’ payments of personal spending money to farms that were inspected by employees from their U.S. offices. The alleged purpose of the payments was to ensure the companies could continue receiving cocoa "at a price that would not be obtainable without child slave labor," the panel said.
"Providing personal spending money to maintain relationship above the contract price for cocoa is not ordinary business conduct, and is more akin to ‘kickbacks,’" the appeals court said. "The allegations paint a picture of overseas slave labor that defendants perpetuated from headquarters in the United States."
The ruling described the plaintiffs as former child slaves who were kidnapped and forced to work on cocoa farms for as long as 14 hours a day without pay.
Latest Stories
-
Confidence high as Vice President visits Black Stars ahead of Panama showdown
21 minutes -
BECE 2026: Five important steps JHS graduates should take before starting SHS
24 minutes -
2026 World Cup: Ghana fails in bid to have Partey’s Canada visa denial overturned
29 minutes -
University of Nottingham cyberattack triggers CSA warning to Ghanaian universities
33 minutes -
Ghana-South Africa Business Chamber condemns xenophobic attacks on Ghanaians
54 minutes -
“US Justice Department hasn’t gotten back to Ghana that it has served Ofori-Atta” – OSP
59 minutes -
Deputy Energy Minister reaffirms Ghana’s commitment to gas-led development at West Africa Gas Summit
1 hour -
Protect Ghanaians in South Africa through diplomacy – Bosome Freho MP to gov’t
1 hour -
About 49,000 Ghanaians still live in South Africa – Bosome Freho MP discloses
1 hour -
Bosome Freho MP urges South Africa to take decisive action against Xenophobic attacks
2 hours -
Mfantsipim SHS final-year student commits suicide
2 hours -
Complete Farmer launches CF Grower and CF Buyer to deepen digital agriculture in Ghana
2 hours -
Nukunu Sports Academy to support young football enthusiast until he turns 14
2 hours -
With green card, Ofori-Atta has far more protection than he had previously – Kpebu
2 hours -
Ghana Gas pays courtesy call on NPA CEO
2 hours