Showing posts with label Burkina Faso. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Burkina Faso. Show all posts

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Burkina Faso: Childhoods Lost in the Gold Mines | Pulitzer Center



Barefoot and shirtless, Karim Sawadogo, 9, works with his 
uncle at a gold mine. He has been to school, but only for a while.
 "My dream," he says, "is to make enough money so I don't 
have to do this anymore." Image by Larry C. Price. Burkina Faso, 2013.

TIÉBÉLÉ, Burkina Faso - On the rocky ground outside the Kollo mining village near the border between Burkina Faso and Ghana, about 100 people are working, 30 or so of them children. They smash boulders into pebbles and pebbles into grit with primitive hammers and sticks. They haul buckets of well water up the hillside and, pouring this water into shallow pans filled with rock and dirt, they swirl the muddy mix, looking in the silt for tiny flecks of gold.

Click below to read the complete article:


Burkina Faso: Childhoods Lost in the Gold Mines | Pulitzer Center


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Thursday, August 26, 2010

Côte d’Ivoire/Nigeria: Combat Trafficking for Prostitution | Human Rights Watch

Human Rights Watch logoImage via Wikipedia
From Human Rights Watch
Networks Freely Move Women, Girls Across West Africa
August 26, 2010

These women and girls were sold dreams of migrating to better their lives, but then found themselves in a personal hell. The Ivorian and Nigerian authorities need to find and prosecute the perpetrators, work with regional neighbors to shut down their operations, and do more to protect the victims.

Corinne Dufka, senior West Africa researcher

(Dakar) - Authorities in Côte d'Ivoire and Nigeria should investigate and close down networks that traffic Nigerian women and girls to Côte d'Ivoire for forced prostitution, Human Rights Watch said today. Human Rights Watch also called for collaboration among regional neighbors to improve border efforts to combat trafficking.

In July 2010, Human Rights Watch traveled to three Ivorian towns and met with groups totaling around 30 Nigerian women believed to have been trafficked for prostitution. Eight victims were interviewed individually. Scores of similar cases involving Nigerian women and girls were documented by interviews with Ivorian officials, United Nations personnel, and Nigerian embassy staff. Many victims were either between the ages of 15 and 17 or had been minors when brought to Côte d'Ivoire.

"These women and girls were sold dreams of migrating to better their lives, but then found themselves in a personal hell," said Corinne Dufka, senior West Africa researcher at Human Rights Watch. "The Ivorian and Nigerian authorities need to find and prosecute the perpetrators, work with regional neighbors to shut down their operations, and do more to protect the victims."

In two small towns in central Côte d'Ivoire, with populations of about 40,000 and 50,000, respectively, Human Rights Watch documented the presence of five separate brothels of Nigerian women and girls. A gendarme in one of the towns estimated that at least 100 Nigerian women were working there as prostitutes. Human Rights Watch investigations indicated that the majority of them were likely to have been trafficked.

Deceived into Prostitution
All of the women and girls interviewed by Human Rights Watch described being deceived into migrating with promises of work as apprentice hairdressers or tailors, or to work in other businesses elsewhere in West Africa or in Europe. They said that Nigerian women recruited and transported them overland through Benin, Togo, Ghana, and Burkina Faso. The majority of victims told both Human Rights Watch and the Nigerian embassy that they came from Delta and Edo States in southern Nigeria.

Nigerian embassy staff in Abidjan told Human Rights Watch that they have repatriated scores of women trafficked for prostitution, including dozens this year alone, and noted that the problem is on the rise.

Ruth (not her real name), a 27-year-old Nigerian woman trafficked for prostitution in central Côte d'Ivoire, said:

"I came here six years ago with five other girls from Delta State. The woman who brought us told me that she sold wrappers [fabric used as a skirt] in Côte d'Ivoire. I thought it was a good opportunity for me to learn a business, so I left Nigeria and went with her. The second day after we arrived, she handed us each a condom and I thought, What is this? She said, ‘This is what you are going to do.' What could I do? I had nobody backing me ... so I did it."

An 18-year-old Nigerian woman told Human Rights Watch that the woman who trafficked her two years ago enticed her to leave Nigeria with promises to learn to be a hairdresser. Another young woman, from Edo State, described her own experience:

"She said I was going to sell clothes in a boutique in Liberia, but took me [to Côte d'Ivoire] and every night I have to do this.... Just a thousand [CFA francs] each man. I have been here for two years. I don't like it. I want to leave."

Debt Bondage
Within days of arrival in Côte d'Ivoire, the traffickers demanded that the women and girls engage in prostitution to pay off an exorbitant "debt" of generally 1.5 to 2 million CFA francs (US$3,000 to $4,000), though the cost of overland transportation to Côte d'Ivoire is only roughly 100,000 CFA ($200). This amounts to debt bondage, a practice similar to slavery under the 1956 United Nations Supplementary Convention on the Abolition of Slavery.

Several victims said they had not yet been able to pay off their "debt" despite engaging in sex work in Côte d'Ivoire for between two and six years, and despite having sex with up to 30 men a night. Nigerian women and girls in central Côte d'Ivoire said that they receive 1,000 CFA francs ($2) per act, or 5,000 CFA francs ($10) for the night.

"You have to work so hard," Ruth said. "In one night, you have to have sex with 15, 20, even 30 men. You work until the sun comes up and you cannot even open your eyes. Some of the girls are small, less than 18 years old. They think they are coming for something else. They were not doing this kind of work [prostitution] in Nigeria. One girl, she is so small, she is only 16. This is not the work for a small girl."

Ivorian, UN, and Nigerian officials described to Human Rights Watch an incident in July 2010 in which three 17-year-old Nigerians who refused to engage in sex work after being trafficked were locked in a room and denied food for three days. They finally escaped, went to the local police, and were repatriated by the Nigerian embassy.

All the victims Human Rights Watch interviewed said they wanted to leave Côte d'Ivoire and the sex trade, but felt they had no escape because of the perceived consequences of failing to pay the debt.

"We can't leave," said Faith (not her real name), an 18-year-old Nigerian woman trafficked for prostitution in Central Côte d'Ivoire. "The girls are scared."

The women said repeatedly that "bad things" would happen to them or their families if they escaped, but were too afraid to provide further details regarding the precise threats or the person who would hurt them. Further investigation needs to be undertaken by Ivorian and Nigerian authorities to determine the extent of the trafficking operation, the threats being made, and ways to protect the victims, Human Rights Watch said.

Failure to Investigate, Prosecute Traffickers
Diplomats and international aid agency officials told Human Rights Watch that Ivorian authorities have rarely conducted in-depth investigations into trafficking for prostitution or successfully prosecuted traffickers. The United States State Department's 2009 Trafficking in Persons Report identified a single such prosecution that year.

The central impediments to investigation and prosecution appear to be an ineffective legal framework and a lack of will, or interest in the cases, on the part of Ivorian authorities, Human Rights Watch said. Côte d'Ivoire has not signed the UN Trafficking Protocol and also lacks domestic legislation that specifically criminalizes trafficking. Human Rights Watch called on the Ivorian government to sign and ratify the UN Trafficking Protocol without delay and pass a draft domestic anti-trafficking law, currently under consideration, that is in harmony with international standards.

Ivorian authorities interviewed by Human Rights Watch were aware of the presence of Nigerian prostitutes and the possibility that they had been trafficked, but seemed to have done little to determine how the young women had ended up in urban brothels or to question those appearing to be running them.

The Nigerian government has passed anti-trafficking legislation in accordance with international law and has provided significant funding to domestic law enforcement and anti-trafficking bodies to implement these efforts. However, Côte d'Ivoire is not a central focus of Nigerian anti-trafficking efforts, which concentrate more on trafficking to other West African countries or to Europe or the United States.

"Nigerian and Ivorian authorities must more proactively combat those who prey on vulnerable girls and women," Dufka said. "Many more will be trafficked for prostitution if governments fail to take robust action."

Recommended Actions

To Ivorian authorities:

  • Ensure that the current draft anti-trafficking law provides a framework for combating trafficking, including trafficking for the purpose of prostitution, in accordance with international standards, and then pass the law without delay.
  • Sign and ratify the UN Trafficking Protocol.
  • Conduct a thorough and comprehensive national investigation into the trafficking of Nigerian women and girls for the purposes of prostitution.
  • In collaboration with the United Nations Operation in Côte d'Ivoire (UNOCI), where necessary, arrest and prosecute those engaged in recruiting children for prostitution and those who force women and girls into prostitution.
  • Discipline police officers or gendarmes who extort and demand bribes from sex workers to release them from detention.
  • Improve outreach and services to trafficking victims by, for example:
    • asking radio stations to disseminate information about where victims can reach help;
    • establishing telephone hotlines for victims; and
    • providing victims with needed psychological and physical health assistance, as well as other social services needed for recovery.

To Nigerian authorities:

  • Conduct an in-depth investigation into who is operating the trafficking networks into Côte d'Ivoire, and prosecute those responsible in accordance with international fair trial standards.
  • Protect women and girls repatriated to Nigeria after escaping from traffickers by closely following their cases and ensuring that they are not victims of reprisals for failing to repay their "debts." Ensure that the repatriated victims benefit from National Agency for Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) programs for physical and psychosocial recovery, as well as skills training.

To the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS):

  • Engage with member states to develop multi-country strategies to protect women and girls from trafficking and identify and arrest organizers of trafficking networks operating throughout West Africa.
Côte d’Ivoire/Nigeria: Combat Trafficking for Prostitution | Human Rights Watch
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Monday, August 16, 2010

NAPTIP to prosecute 3 for human trafficking « Vanguard

By Simon Ebegbulem


BENIN CITY — THE authorities of the National Agency for the Prohibition of Traffic in Persons, NAPTIP, have concluded plans to prosecute three Nigerians who were recently arrested by Marine police in Akwa Ibom State, while attempting to traffic 55 citizens of Benin Republic, Burkina Faso and Togo to Gabon, to Europe for prostitution.

Besides, the agency disclosed that it had successfully prosecuted 85 persons allegedly involved in human trafficking since its establishment in 2003. This was disclosed by the Executive Secretary of the agency, Mr. Chuzi Egede, at a two-day workshop on the Dissemination of the National Policy on Protection and Assistance to Trafficked Persons in Nigeria, weekend in Benin City.

According to him, the 55 victims have since been re-united with their families through their various embassies. He added that the agency had achieved 100 per cent in the prosecution of arrested persons involved in human trafficking.

“Only two weeks ago, we received about 55 victims who were rescued from the high sea by the marine police in Akwa Ibom State and we have since re-united them with their families.

“All of them were from neighbouring countries of Togo, Benin, Burkina Faso and the likes and through their embassies, we have been able to take them to their countries and the three Nigerians who were trafficking them to Gabon are in our custody and very soon, we will commence their prosecution in our law courts.”

He added that: “Out of these numbers that have passed through our shelters, we have been able to rehabilitate, empower not less than 800 and it is a continuing process”.

He said the agency has already convicted 20 persons as at July this year adding that “all traffickers that are apprehended are prosecuted in court and we have had 100 per cent success in prosecution that is to say no trafficker has gone free after being apprehended by us.”

Earlier in her address, the Director, Counseling and Rehabilitation, Lilly Oguejiofor explained that the National Policy on Protection and Assistance to Trafficked Persons in Nigeria had even been adopted by other countries in West Africa for use in the rehabilitation of trafficked persons within the sub_region.

She said the workshop was part of programmes to embark on a nationwide dissemination of the document. In his goodwill message, the Chief Mission, International Organization for Migration (IOM) Martin Ocaga, said the IOM decided to worked with the NAPTIP because of its confidence in NAPTIP philosophy on human trafficking .

He also commended the Canadian International Development Agency for supporting the health chapter of the policy.



NAPTIP to prosecute 3 for human trafficking « Vanguard


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Thursday, March 25, 2010

Tracing the bitter truth of chocolate and child labour

Page last updated at 12:09 GMT, Wednesday, 24 March 2010

Reporter Paul Kenyon with cocoa beans in Ghana
Paul Kenyon posed as a cocoa dealer to find child labourers
This Easter, Britons will eat their way through 80m chocolate eggs without the slightest taste of how the essential ingredient in our favourite treat is harvested.

The truth, as BBC Panorama reporter Paul Kenyon discovered when he posed as a cocoa dealer in West Africa, leaves a bitter taste.

In an investigation into the supply chain that delivers much of the chocolate sold in the UK - more than half a million tonnes a year - the BBC found evidence of human trafficking and child slave labour.

Panorama also found that even chocolate marketed as Fairtrade cannot rule out that that, despite having standards and auditing in place, there may still be a possibility of child labour - as defined by the International Labour Organisation (ILO) in the supply chain.

Dangerous tools
By the time it hits the High Street, cocoa becomes increasingly hard to trace.
As it passes from farmer to buyer to wholesalers, exporters, importers and manufacturers on the journey from cocoa pod to dried bean to chocolate bunny, it becomes more and more likely that the source of the bean will be lost.

Together, the two countries produce 60% of the world's cocoa and more than 10m people survive off the industry.

In a village in Ghana, Kenyon met 12-year-old Ouare Fatao Kwakou, who was sold to traffickers by his uncle and taken from neighbouring and impoverished Burkina Faso to work as a cocoa picker.
Ouare Fatao
Ouare Fatao was taken from Burkina Faso and sold as a cocoa picker
More than a year later, he had not been paid a penny for his work - the profits of his labour going instead to his new cocoa masters and to the uncle who sold him.

In the port city of San Pedro in Ivory Coast, Kenyon posed as a trader and sold on cocoa beans which had been produced by the worst forms of child labour.

It is at this point where the traceability of the cocoa ends and it can be sold on to major chocolate makers worldwide who cannot say how it was sourced.

The end buyer of Kenyon's child labour beans was one of the world's biggest exporters who in turn sell it on to several well known high street names.

Fairtrade
Panorama has seen documents which show that in September 2009, the Fairtrade cocoa co-operative in Ghana which supplies Cadbury and Divine suspended seven out of 33 of their cocoa farming communities in one of the major growing regions after they were found to be using the worst forms of child labour.

The co-operative, Kuapa Kokoo, is supplied by 1,200 different cocoa communities that are made up of more than 45,000 farmers.

Following remedial action by Kuapa Kokoo, the Fairtrade suspension was lifted in early January. The co-operative said it is the only time that it has failed an audit of its farmers' practices with respect to child labour in 15 years as a Fairtrade supplier.

Harriet Lamb, executive director of the Fairtrade Foundation in the UK, said the suspensions of farming communities that are suspected of using child labour is evidence that the Fairtrade system is working.
It means that unlike other chocolate products, Fairtrade cocoa is traceable to the source farm and action can be taken when bad practices are uncovered, as happened in the case of Kuapa Kokoo.
cocoa beans drying in the sun
Cocoa beans are dried in the hot sun before being sold on to wholesalers

"We make sure in that case that absolutely we're not selling any cocoa on Fairtrade terms while we put in place the systems and structures to stop it happening again," she said of the recent seven suspensions.

In a statement to Panorama, Cadbury said it had not been supplied with any cocoa beans from any of the seven communities in question either before or during the suspension.

It said: "The fact that child labour issues were identified…is evidence the Fairtrade certification process is working."

No schooling
In Ivory Coast, Panorama met a farmer who relies on his 8-year-old brother and 11-year-old son to help harvest the cocoa that goes to the co-operative supplying Nestle as part of its recent Fairtrade initiative. In January, the company began selling Fairtrade four-finger Kit Kats in the UK.
In cocoa-growing West Africa, subsistence farmers who cannot afford to pay wages have for generations seen children as free labour.

Neither of the young boys goes to school and figures compiled by the US State Department show that they are among an estimated 100,000 Ivorian children who are child labourers in the cocoa industry.
Although Nestle does buy from the cooperative that the farmer sells his crop to, the company said in a statement: "Panorama has been unable to provide us with any evidence whatsoever of child labour being used to produce cocoa beans purchased by Nestlé."

'Complete failure'
In America - the world's largest consumer of chocolate - US Congressman Eliot Engel proposed legislation nine years ago that would have required all chocolate sold in America to state on the label that it is slave labour free or child slave labour free.

But in 2001, he agreed instead to an industry regulated six-point plan to put an end to child labour in the chocolate trade, with the threat of legislation looming should they fail to act.
Burkina Faso village
Impoverished villages in Burkina Faso are a source of child labour
"I didn't trust them at first, but once they came around I trusted them and you know the proof is in the pudding so to speak. If they became hostile or were dragging their feet, we could always resort to the legislation," he said of the United States' chocolate giants.

But lawyer Terry Collingsworth, who has acted against the chocolate industry, said the plan is a "complete failure" and it is time to enact the law that Mr Engel first floated nine years ago.

"Let's dust off that law, and if you mean what you say and you want to stop the use of child slaves producing products like cocoa, let's pass that law, and then we'll have something to work with so that we can successfully stop this crime."

A result of the partnership - a collaboration between Mr Engel, his colleague Senator Tom Harkin, and the US chocolate industry - was to establish a foundation to help end the worst forms of child labour in West Africa, known as the International Cocoa Initiative (ICI).

Executive director Peter McAllister said the chocolate companies recognise that there is a problem and are doing their best to find a solution to the practice of using child labour, adding that human rights issues are "complex and challenging" for the companies involved.

"If there wasn't a problem we wouldn't be here so we acknowledge the problem," he said of the widespread practice of using children - a sensitive issue on the ground in West Africa - both politically and economically for the families that need the income from their children working.

Mr McAllister said that is why the ICI is working in 243 communities in West Africa and has already made sure that 16,000 children are in school.

Panorama - Chocolate: The Bitter Truth, BBC One, Wednesday, 24 March at 2100GMT and then, for UK audiences only, on the BBC iPlayer

http://news.bbc.co.uk/panorama/hi/front_page/newsid_8583000/8583499.stm
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