End Child Labor in Cotton
Thousands of children around the world are forced to pick cotton.
In India, child workers in the cottonseed industry are often in a state of debt bondage and work at least nine hours a day. Pesticides used during production cause health problems for the children and they report experiencing headaches, convulsions and respiratory problems. The long-term effects of exposure to toxic chemicals have not been measured.
In Uzbekistan, one of the world’s largest exporters of cotton, as many as two million children are forced to leave school and pick cotton in order to meet government-imposed cotton production quotas.
This cotton is exported to produce the jeans, T-shirts, and other clothing worn by consumers in the United States and in Europe.
What YOU can do:
• The next time you buy a T-shirt or a pair of jeans, ask the company where their cotton comes from, and how they ensure child labor was
not used in its production
Write to the companies below demanding that they:
• Institute a company-wide human rights policy covering their cotton suppliers which bans child labor and upholds core labor rights
• Trace whether their cotton comes from Uzbekistan and publicly demand that the Uzbek government end the practice of forced child labor
Cargill: Gregory Page, Cargill, Inc., PO Box 9300, Minneapolis, MN, 55440-9300
Hanes: Rich Noll, Hanesbrands, Inc., 1000 East Hanes Mill Road, Winston Salem, NC, 27105
Fruit of the Loom: John Holland, Fruit of the Loom, 1 Fruit of the Loom Dr., Bowling Green, KY, 42103