Freedom 101
Products of Slavery
You can read the short transcript instead.
- Slavery has been linked to the supply chains of many everyday products and commodities, including shoes, electronics, cocoa, and cotton.
- Nestle, Mars, and Hershey all source cocoa from West Africa, where cases of child labor and forced labor have been discovered and still persist.
- Modern slavery is connected to crisps, ice cream, and lipstick through palm oil. The palm oil industry employs 3.5 million people. Many are promised high-paying work in another country, only to suffer conditions of forced labor upon arrival.
- Cotton is in 40% of all textiles and is known to have people enslaved at every stage of the industry, from germination, harvesting, and spinning to manufacturing the clothes.
- It would cost consumers as little as 1.8% more per item to double the pay of a sweatshop worker. A study showed that consumers would be willing to pay up to 15% more for slavery-free clothing.
- As many as one in three foreign workers in Malaysia’s electronics sector may be working under conditions of forced labor.
- Coltan and other “conflict minerals” present in electronic devices often come from forced labor in illegal mining whose profits support armed forces.
- Forced labor is big business, with profits estimated at $150 billion, or around £125 billion.
- Some countries have been making efforts to force companies to take steps to ensure their supply chains are slavery-free, including Brazil’ has a “Dirty List,” the UK’s Modern Slavery Act and the U.S. Trade Facilitation and Trade Enforcement Act.
Take Action: End child exploitation in cocoa
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What companies use modern-day slave labour?
Don’t forget to add sex violence trafficking trade
hi save the kid
Hi peeps I agree and thanks for this helpful info.
Even construction companies should also be eyed so that this will end and let everyone live in harmony