Ivory Coast
The world’s top cocoa producer is still battling against increased child labor on farms.
In a crackdown in Soubre, Ivory Coast’s cocoa producing hub, west of Abidjan, police picked up 68 children being used on farms.
The swoop was carried out in a widely-publicized operation named Nawa 2.
Alain Lartmel is Director of child protection at the ministry of women, family and children.
"We do an initial listening. This listening allows us to detect if the child is in a trafficking situation or not, in a work situation or not. If the child is found to be in a trafficking or labor situation, we engage in mediation to find families. When we have these families with us, the mediation consists in exchanging with these families and allowing the child to return to his biological family", he said.
Many of the children in Ivory Coast come from Burkina Faso and Mali. They are traditional providers of labor for their richer neighbor.
"At the age of 10, I went to school. Now that my parents don't have enough money, I went out and helped them in the field to work", a 16-year old boy said.
Apart from the swoops by local police, regular work is carried out in the countryside by local child protection committees.
"We have been raising awareness for a long time, but as long as we don't give a strong signal - in addition to punishing those who employ their children in dangerous jobs, it will always continue", said Luc Zaka, police commissioner in the Soubre region.
Many of the children are illiterate, capable of going back to the classroom or learning a trade. But instead find themselves being used illegally for work.
Ivory Coast faces mounting demands from western consumers for ethical chocolate, a product that is free of child labor.
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