Pressure on retailers, food companies and biofuel producers to ensure that
the palm oil they buy comes from legal and sustainable sources stepped up
another notch today with the publication of a new report linking growing demand
for the crop to forced evictions, intimidation and even paramilitary murders in
Colombia.
The report
from anti-poverty lobby group War on
Want claims that Colombia's armed forces are colluding with right wing
paramilitary groups in the killing of hundreds of Afro-Colombians and the
displacement of thousands more to make way for palm oil plantations.
The group claims that UK accounts for almost half of Colombia's exports of
palm oil and as such many UK firms are indirectly contributing to the land
clearances.
"The Colombian government and the paramilitaries are profiting from the
scramble for biofuels while people who stand in their way are murdered and
dispossessed," said Gemma Houldey, War on Want's international programmes
officer for conflict zones. "Some products bought in Britain could well contain
ingredients which results from this brutality."
The findings echo a similar
Greenpeace
investigation late last year which claimed that a raft of multinationals,
including Nestle, Unilever, and Procter & Gamble, were guilty of sourcing
illegal palm oil plantations in Indonesia that have contributed to
deforestation, destruction of biodiversity and forced land clearances.
The criticism has prompted significant new commitments from a number of palm
oil purchasers.
Sainsbury's
committed last year to begin phasing out palm oil that had not been
officially certified as legal and environmentally sustainable by industry group
the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil. That commitment was followed earlier
this month by a similar
pledge
from food giant Unilever, which said it too would begin sourcing certified
palm oil as it attempts to ensure it can trace the origins of all the palm oil
it uses in Europe by 2012.
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