Cocoa
Series exploring the everyday lives of children who go to work. In Ghana, Hazel Lindsey investigates the child labourers at the bottom of the supply chain for chocolate.
Two hundred million children around the world go to work every day. This series explores their everyday lives. In Ghana, Hazel Lindsey investigates the child labourers at the bottom of the supply chain for the world's favourite treat - chocolate. She travels to a cocoa village to live with young cocoa pickers and find out what the real cost of our chocolate addiction is.
Almost 70 percent of the world's chocolate is grown in West Africa. If you buy a chocolate bar on the high street, there is a good chance it has started life in Africa. And children play a vital, if controversial role in its creation.
Patrick and his friends' day begins at 6.00 during the harvest, not to get ready for school but to help their families to harvest cocoa pods in the jungle. They are typical of pickers all over Ghana, with cuts from a machete or snake bites a daily hazard.
The cost of three bars of chocolate, less than three pounds, are the boys' wages for a day. Their families live in such extreme poverty that the children are key to survival, with school often coming second. Hazel explores whether it is possible for the children to escape poverty, or is their destiny as future cocoa farmers already decided?
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Clips
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Use of child labour on cocoa plantations in Ghana (pt 3/3)
Duration: 10:25
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Use of child labour on cocoa plantations in Ghana (pt 2/3)
Duration: 07:26
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Use of child labour on cocoa plantations in Ghana (pt 1/3)
Duration: 11:19
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Use of child labour on cocoa plantations in Ghana (pt 3/3)
Duration: 10:25
Credit
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Hazel Lindsey |
Broadcasts
- Thu 29 Mar 2012 04:00
- Thu 26 Apr 2012 05:00
- Fri 18 May 2012 05:00
- Fri 15 Jun 2012 05:00
- Wed 17 Oct 2012 04:00
- Thu 14 Feb 2013 04:05
- Wed 27 Feb 2013 04:30
- Thu 25 Apr 2013 04:30
- Thu 17 Oct 2013 04:30
- Fri 17 Jul 2015 04:00