A tobacco farmer on his farm. The US restricted tobacco imports from
Malawi over allegations workers, including children, were being
exploited. PHOTO | FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP
Blantyre,
Malawi
is being forced to confront child and forced labour practices after the
US restricted tobacco imports from the impoverished southeastern
African nation over allegations workers including children were being
exploited.
Although exports to the
United States make up only a small part of Malawi's total, the US move
could make it harder selling its tobacco elsewhere and has sparked
anxiety among farmers who fear they will be forced to accept lower
prices.
As tobacco, known locally as
"green gold", is Malawi's top crop in terms of employment, foreign
exchange earnings (60 percent) and tax revenue (25 percent), any trouble
the sector runs into could quickly reverberate throughout the economy.
The US decision piles even more pressure on the tobacco sector, already confronted with global anti-tobacco campaigns.
‘FORCED LABOUR, POVERTY WAGES’
The trouble began in late October. British law
firm Leigh Day announced it was preparing a landmark class action case
against British American Tobacco (BAT) on behalf of 2,000 Malawian
farmers, including hundreds of children, for forced labour and poverty
wages.
BAT, which says it "takes the
issue of child labour extremely seriously", has denied any wrongdoing
and noted that it buys tobacco from Malawi via international dealers who
are required adhere to a code of conduct that does not tolerate child
and forced labour.
The US suspended
imports of tobacco from Malawi, saying it had information that
reasonably indicated it was being produced using forced labour and
forced child labour.
According to a
survey conducted in 2017 by the country's statistics agency the use of
child labour in Malawi is extensive. It found that 38 percent of the
country's children aged between five and 17 were working.
Although
the survey did not provide specific information about the tobacco
sector, it is widely acknowledged that child labour is a problem.
Betty
Chinyamunyamu, who heads an association of smallholder farmers, said
incidents of child labour occur despite efforts to eliminate the
practice.
"In some cases, farmers may
think that that is the way things are supposed to be without knowing
that they are engaging in child labour," she said.
Tobacco
and Allied Workers Union general secretary Raphael Sandram accused the
government of dithering in addressing child labour in the industry.
"In
our labour report in 2015, we raised the issue that there were some
irregularities in the industry that government needed to address," he
said.
"The fact that the government
did not respond according to the requirements of the US government means
that they delayed to act on these issues. But these issues have been
there for a long time," he said.
Agriculture
Minister Kondwani Nankhumwa acknowledged pockets of child and forced
labour in Malawi, but downplayed the US action saying it "is not a ban,
they are just pushing for compliance".
US
authorities said firms wishing to import Malawi tobacco into the
country will need to demonstrate it was not produced with forced labour.
But what will be needed to convince US authorities and how much effort
firms will be willing to take is unclear.
Nankhumwa said 80 percent of Malawi's tobacco was grown under a special scheme which is free from child or forced labour.
"So, we are only grappling with the 20 percent within which there is also some kind of compliance," he said.
PRESSURE ON FARMERS
The law firm Leigh Day described a tobacco farming system that puts farmers under extreme pressure.
Leaf
buyers who sell to multinational tobacco firms make contracts with
landowners who then engage tenant farmers who spend 10 months on the
plantations. Each tenant farmer is allotted around a hectare but needs
four workers to work that amount of land.
"However,
the amount the tenant farmers are paid for their crop is too low for
them to be able to afford to employ workers to help on the farms. As a
result, they have no option but to rely on their children to work on the
farms," said Leigh Day in a statement.
Nankhumwa
pledged Malawi would conduct the necessary policy reviews to protect
the tobacco industry and bring the country into compliance with global
standards.
"The government is
reviewing the tenancy system, which is a bone of contention but also
perceived to be catalyst for child and forced labour," he said.
Farmers
– who are starting to prepare their fields for the next planting season
– are distraught at the prospect of being squeezed further by falling
prices.
"We are baffled and
confused," said Alick Yagontha, a small farmer in the northern Rumphi
district who has been growing tobacco for two decades and harvested
28,000 kilogrammes this year.
He fears there will be "no future for tobacco farming in Malawi" if prices fall.
No comments :
Post a Comment