Tuesday, February 09 2010

World News

Walmart embroiled in child labour scandal

By Stephen Foley in New York

Monday November 02 2009

WALMART, the world's largest retailer, is embroiled in a child labour scandal in the US, after children as young as five were found working on a farm that supplies blueberries to the company.

The revelations came as federal authorities said spot checks on farms in the state of Michigan found that more than half were violating child labour or migrant housing rules.

Human rights groups have stepped up their calls for a clampdown on agricultural businesses, where they say children are routinely exploited. Poor families put their children to work to make ends meet, while agriculture bosses, struggling to meet supermarkets' relentless demands for lower-priced goods, are turning a blind eye, campaigners say.

Walmart and two other supermarket chains said they were suspending dealings with Adkin Blue Ribbon Packing Co, the Michigan-based supplier at the heart of the latest scandal. Walmart will not buy anything from Adkin "pending the outcome of an investigation by our ethical sourcing team", a company spokesman said.

Adkin general manager Tony Marr said the company did not condone the use of children at its growing facilities. "Walmart, Kroger and Meijer are very large customers of ours," he said.

Buckets

"We're co-operating with them in providing information about our internal investigation, trying to figure out what the kids were doing there."

The children were being put to work because their small hands are more efficient at picking the tiny fruit. They carted buckets of blueberries and provided other help to their parents, also workers on the farm, according to footage obtained by a news channel.

A five-year-old girl named Suli was shown lugging two full buckets of blueberries picked by her parents and her brothers, aged seven and eight. An 11-year-old boy on the farm said he had been picking blueberries there for three years.

Government investigators found four children working in Adkin's fields during an unannounced visit in July.

US law does not allow children younger than 12 to work on farms. Children who are 12 or 13 can have non-hazardous farm jobs outside of school hours.

Human Rights Watch says that the laws covering child labour on farms reflect a "bygone era". The group's executive director, Lois Whitman said: "Today, the vast majority of child farmworkers are not working on their parents' land but are hired labourers employed by large commercial enterprises, and exposed to the increased hazards of heavy mechanisation and pesticide use." (© Independent News Service)

- Stephen Foley in New York

Irish Independent

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