Audio By Carbonatix
A federal appeals court on Tuesday rejected a proposed class action by eight Malian citizens who sought to hold Hershey, Nestle and five other companies liable for child labour on Ivory Coast cocoa farms.
In a 3-0 decision, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit found no causal connection between the plaintiffs' forced labour and the defendants' alleged venture to obtain "cheap cocoa harvested by enslaved children."
The plaintiffs said they were required to live in squalor and threatened with starvation if they did not work, after being approached by unfamiliar men who falsely promised paying jobs.
They sued under a federal law protecting children and other victims of human trafficking and forced labour.

Circuit Judge Justin Walker, however, said the plaintiffs alleged at most they worked in areas that supplied cocoa to the defendants, which buy an estimated 70% of Ivorian cocoa, rather than specific farms that supplied the cocoa.
"Is there a 'possibility' that at least some of the importers sourced cocoa from those farms? Yes," Walker wrote. "But is it 'plausible'? Not on this complaint."
Other defendants included privately-held Cargill, privately-held Mars, Mondelez International (MDLZ.O), opens new tab, Barry Callebaut (BARN.S), opens new tab and Olam International.
Mali and the Ivory Coast share a border in West Africa. A trial judge ruled for the defendants in June 2022.
Terry Collingsworth, a lawyer representing the plaintiffs, said his clients were "extremely disappointed" and considering their legal options.
"The court rewarded the chocolate multinational defendants ... for concealing their cocoa supply chains, such that former child slaves are unable to link a specific company to the Cote d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast) farms where they were enslaved," he said.
In March 2024, the same court dismissed a similar lawsuit seeking to hold five major technology companies, including Apple and Tesla, liable for child labour in cobalt mining in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Latest Stories
-
Unilever Ghana launches recycling initiative, transforms used toothpaste tubes into school furniture
10 minutes -
Gov’t signs Service Level Agreement to enforce electronic payments, phase out manual cheques
13 minutes -
Group slams government over ‘exploitation’ of unemployed youth through security services recruitment fees
44 minutes -
Meet the Only Female Referee at the 2026 Honda Football Championship
45 minutes -
Galamsey fight: Progress made but more work needed – NAIMOS
56 minutes -
So far so good, we trust the listening NDC government to deliver – Nsuta Manhene
59 minutes -
Deputy Education Minister urges WAEC to leverage AI to curb exam malpractice
1 hour -
Stakeholders advocate laws to address technology-facilitated gender-based violence
1 hour -
TESCON executives urged to unite behind Bawumia’s leadership for transformation
1 hour -
AfCFTA offers opportunity to transform Africa’s economy – Chief of Staff
1 hour -
PAC raises alarm over GH¢4.4bn questionable liabilities in Energy Ministry accounts
2 hours -
MIIF records GH¢5.43bn mineral royalty inflows, highest since inception
2 hours -
2026 Kwahu Easter Paragliding set for April 3-6
2 hours -
We’re under more pressure – KATH overwhelmed as ‘no bed syndrome’ persists
2 hours -
Watermelon seller escapes death as truck veers off road at Sege
2 hours
