In the News

Human cost of Brazil's biofuels boom

Los Angeles Times
06/16/2008

For as far as the eye can see, stalks of sugar cane march across the hillsides here like giant praying mantises. This is ground zero for ethanol production in Brazil -- "the Saudi Arabia of biofuels," as some have already labeled this vast South American country.

But even as Brazil's booming economy is powered by fuel processed from the cane, labor officials are confronting what some call the country's dirty little ethanol secret: the mostly primitive conditions endured by the multitudes of workers who cut the cane.

Zimbabwe: Killings and Torture Continue as Trade Unions Call for ILO Commission of Inquiry

International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC)
06/13/2008

Trade unionists from across Africa and from around the world have called today in Geneva for an official ILO Commission of Inquiry into Zimbabwe, as more reports of torture and murder of trade unionists by security forces and thugs linked to the Mugabe regime emerge from the country.

Central Asia: Child Labor Alive And Thriving

Radio Free Europe
06/12/2008

By Gulnoza Saidazimova

As World Day Against Child Labor is marked as part of continuing efforts to stamp out the practice around the globe, there are hundreds of thousands of underage children in Central Asia skipping school to work as unskilled laborers in cities or on farms.

While some children toil out of necessity for their families, in some countries the use of child labor is a state policy.

COSATU condemns attack on Zimbabwe union

COSATU
06/11/2008

The Congress of South African Trade Unions strongly condemns the attack on offices belonging to the Progressive Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ), an affiliate of the ZCTU, on 9 June 2008 in Gokwe.

Zanu PF supporters and ‘war veterans’ stormed into the union’s offices and ordered the union to cease business. After ransacking the offices and taking undisclosed items, they locked the offices.

Of Human Bondage

Wall Street Journal
06/10/2008

The biofuels boom has contributed to the recent spike in food prices that threatens the world's poor. In Brazil, home of ethanol made from sugar cane, it's had another unintended consequence: slavery. The use of forced labor to work in sugar cane plantations is "a growing trend," according to the U.S. State Department's latest report on human trafficking.

Working flat out - the child labour behind your Egyptian cotton sheets

The Observer (UK)
06/08/2008

By Dan McDougall

The musky scent of cheap patchouli rises from a cracked clay incense burner in the tiny courtyard of Shaban Abdulal Zarhel's decrepit mud and brick home. In the corner, next to the scraggly livestock, his wife, clad from head to toe in a sombre black burka, squats on the floor, smearing the deepest indigo dye on her youngest son's forehead. Alongside, her four other children

sleep off their relentless morning labour in the fields. By 2pm, after a meagre meal of rice and flatbread, they will return to the boiling heat of the meadows.

ZCTU supports COSATU action

ZCTU
06/07/2008

The Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) would like to express its appreciation over efforts made by its counterpart, the Confederation of South Africa Trade Unions (COSATU) to stage a demonstration and a boarder blockade over the deteriorating political situation in Zimbabwe.

We would like to salute hundreds of COSATU members from the Polokwane Province who besieged the Beitbridge boarder post on Saturday 6 June 2008 to protest against Zimbabwe's stolen elections among a host of numerous challenges facing the Southern African State.

Amnesty condemns forced cane labor in Brazil

Reuters
05/28/2008

Amnesty International criticized poor working conditions and forced labor in Brazil's fast-growing sugar cane sector on Wednesday, as the government tries to promote the cane-based ethanol industry as a way to reduce poverty.

The human rights group said Brazil's government has taken steps to improve working conditions in rural areas, but it has confirmed cases of forced labor throughout the country.

Worldwide Fairtrade sales up 47 per cent

FoodNavigator-USA.com
05/23/2008

By Linda Rano

Worldwide consumers spent over €2.3bn on Fairtrade certified products in 2007, a 47 per cent increase on the previous year, according to figures from Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International (FLO).

Total sales volume for sugar rose from 2000 metric tonnes (MT) in 2004 to over 14000 MT in 2007.

Total sales volume for cocoa had been rising consistently from over 4000 MT in 2004 to just under 8000 MT in 2006 but slipped to just over 7000MT in 2007.

Pages