miércoles, 21 de diciembre de 2016

Child labour

Global firms behind popular brands use palm oil produced by child workers in dangerous conditions, Amnesty International has claimed. The human rights organisation traced a range of well-known products back to the palm oil company Wilmar, which it alleged employs children to do back-breaking physical labour on refineries in Indonesia.
            In a 110-page report accompanied by a video, Amnesty alleged products sold by those companies were “tainted by appalling human rights abuses ... with children as young as eight working in hazardous conditions”. It called on the companies implicated to tell customers whether the palm oil in individual products were made using child labour.
            “These findings will shock any consumer who thinks they are making ethical choices in the supermarket when they buy products that claim to use sustainable palm oil,” said the senior Amnesty investigator Meghna Abraham. “There is nothing sustainable about palm oil that is produced using child labour and forced labour. Something is wrong when nine companies turning over a combined revenue of £260bn in 2015 are unable to do anything about the atrocious treatment of palm oil workers earning a pittance.” She said allegations of child labour at Wilmar were not “isolated incidents but are systemic and a predictable result of the way Wilmar does business”.
            In the report, Amnesty alleged that children aged from eight to 14 were carrying out dangerous work without safety equipment, were exposed to toxic pesticides and regularly carried sacks of palm fruit weighing 25kg. One 10-year-old boy, who claims he started working for a Wilmar supplier aged eight, said he gets up at 6am to gather fruit and works every day but Sunday. “I don’t go to school ... I carry the sacks with the loose fruit by myself but can only carry it half full. My hands hurt and my body aches,” he said.
            When approached by Amnesty, seven of nine companies admitted that they use palm oil from Wilmar’s Indonesian supply network but only two offered any detail about which products were affected. The two companies cited “traceability” as a factor in why they had not been aware of abuses at the plantations supplying them palm oil through Wilmar.
            “Using mealy mouthed excuses about ‘traceability’ is a total cop-out from those companies,” said Amnesty’s business and human rights programme director, Peter Frankental. “You can be sure that if one of these companies’ products were contaminated and had to be taken off the shelves of supermarkets, they would ensure that they could trace the source to specific plantations.”
            Wilmar said it was aware of allegations about labour rights abuses before it was contacted by Amnesty and was already taking steps to remedy any failings.  “Wilmar has put a lot of effort and systems in place to deal with labour and social issues in our operations and supply chain,” the company said. “We acknowledge that there are ongoing labour issues in the palm oil industry, and these issues could affect any palm company operating in Indonesia.
“The focus on Wilmar, as the largest processor and merchandiser of palm and lauric oils worldwide, is often used to draw attention to problems in the wider palm oil industry.”


Question 1 (2 points) Indicate whether the following statements are true or false and write down which part of the text justifies your answer.

a. A ten-year-old boy couldn’t carry a 25 kg palm fruit sack.
b. The companies investigated helped Amnesty.
c. Wilmar was trying to solve the problem before Amnesty’s report appeared.
d. Wilmar is only the tip of the iceberg.

Question 2 (2 points) Answer the following questions in your own words.

a. Why could some customers be shocked?
b. Does Mr Frankental accept the companies excuses for using Wilmar’s products? Why?

Question 3 (1.5 points) Find words or phrases in the text that correspond in meaning to the words and definitions given.

a. dangerous, risky (p.2)                       b. do, fulfil (p.4)                                   c. collect (p. 4)
d. certain (p. 6)                         e. know (p. 7)

Question 4 (1.5 points) Complete the following sentences without changing the meaning.

a. Wilmar employs children to do back-breaking physical labour.
            Children…
b. There is nothing sustainable about palm oil that is produced using child labour and forced labour.
            There isn’t...
c. The company said: “We acknowledge that there are ongoing labour issues in the palm oil industry, and these issues could affect any palm company operating in Indonesia.
            The company said that...

Question 5 (3 points) Write a short essay (120-150 words) on the following topic:

Living in the “first world” has many advantages.

Companies do not pay attention to human rights.

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