Pupils at school in the village of Goboue, in the southwest of Côte d'Ivoire ©Issouf Sanogo (AFP) |
"At five years old,
I went to work in the fields with my dad. Today, my children go to
school," said Peter, a cocoa farmer in Bonikro in the centre of Côte
d'Ivoire.
AFP
report continues:
Peter
is one of a generation of farmers at the heart of a drive to keep the country's
children in school and away from its vast plantations.
Côte
d'Ivoire, the world's largest cocoa producer, has struggled to prevent children
working in the cocoa sector, long an accepted practice in the countryside.
|
Côte
d'Ivoire, the world's largest cocoa producer, has struggled to prevent children
working in the cocoa sector, long an accepted practice in the countryside.
The
industry, which accounts for 15 percent of GDP and more than 50 percent of
export receipts as well as two-thirds of the country's jobs, is absolutely
vital to the country's economic welfare, according to the World Bank.
But
criticism of its record on child labour by consumers and buyers has in the past
threatened to tarnish cocoa from the Côte d'Ivoire and undermine its main
export, prompting authorities to act.
The
government's scheme to get children off the plantations and into school,
launched in 2011, is as much about improving the country's image overseas as it
is about protecting its young people.
Sylvie
Patricia Yao, the leader of the campaign and chief of staff to the country's
first lady, said that education would help limit child exploitation in the
cocoa sector.
"(It)
remains for us the alternative and the most effective response in the long-term
fight against child labour," she said.
In
2011, the West African country announced plans to spend almost €20 million (US$22.4
million) between 2015-2017 to reduce the number of minors working on
plantations by 30 percent by 2017 and 70 percent by 2020.
Since
2011, 17,829 classrooms have been built or restored, according to the National
Monitoring Committee (CNS), which is charged with overseeing the government's
anti-child labour efforts.
It
is hoped that the plan will break the cycle of children following their parents
into the fields at a young age.
Djouha
Gneprou, a cocoa planter in Goboue in the country's west, is involved with a
school opened by global food giant Nestle in 2013.
"Once
the child is in school, they won't have time to be in the field so they can't
do the heavy work," he told AFP.
Despite
the scheme, recent figures highlight the challenges in the battle.
- 'Slavery and
exploitation' -
Between
300,000 and one million children are still estimated to work in the sector,
according to a report by the International Cocoa Initiative (ICI), an organization
created by the chocolate industry to fight the exploitation of minors.
Some
4,000 child victims of "slavery and exploitation" were removed from
cocoa plantations in Côte d'Ivoire between 2012 and 2014, according to
authorities.
Whether
paid or unpaid, children often come from Côte d'Ivoire's neighbour Burkina
Faso, and are used to carry heavy loads, fell trees and spray crops with
pesticides.
A
child carries wood, walking back from a cocoa farm to the village of Goboue, in
the southwest of Côte d'Ivoire ©Issouf Sanogo (AFP)
|
Nestle,
the world's largest food company and a major consumer of Côte d'Ivoire cocoa, has
previously faced criticism from pressure groups for profiting from child
labour.
In
2012 Nestle joined the fight against the problem with an information campaign
and school construction programme in the areas where it works most.
The
company has built 40 schools in four years, according to Nestle-Côte d'Ivoire's
sustainability projects coordinator, Omaro Kane.
In
Goboue, the small Nestle-sponsored school has changed the lives of the
residents in this town dependent on cocoa production.
"More
and more, we send the children to school," said Gneprou.
Before
2013, the town's children walked eight kilometres (five miles) every day to
reach the school in a neighbouring village.
"It
was difficult. The youngest children were unable to go to school because the
road is very long," said Jean Oulai, a cocoa farmer in his 60s and father
of six children.
His
youngest son, Oulai, 10, is now in his second year of studies at the town's
school.
- 'It's finished' -
The
modest building with three classrooms, located at the entrance to the village,
has become a victim of its own success, struggling to accommodate its 224
students aged between six and 10.
"The
first year I effectively had a record with 80 students in the first
grade," said headteacher Denis Kouakou Angoua, who spoke in the school's
courtyard overlooking the very cocoa fields where his pupils would once have
been destined to work from a young age.
"Africans
believe that a child is someone who will replace them tomorrow. So they want
the child to learn the same work that they did. That's why they take their
children with them to the fields," said one cocoa planter.
But
now the law bans the custom and punishes offenders harshly.
As
many as 23 people were convicted, of whom 18 were jailed, for child labour
offences between 2012 and 2014, according to Ivorien authorities.
Cocoa
farmer Peter takes the threat of imprisonment seriously.
"It's finished, we
don't send children to the fields anymore. The government said that it's
forbidden and that if we do it then it's prison," he said.
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