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May 12 – Canada hopes to reach free trade agreements with the Philippines and the broader Southeast Asian group this year to strengthen business ties with the region and expand trade beyond the United States. Canadian International Trade Minister Manidel Sidu visited the Philippines on Tuesday, meeting with Philippine Trade Secretary Christina Roque and Finance Secretary Frederic Go. After the meetings, Sidu stated, “The negotiations are progressing very well.” Sidu noted that Canada has also joined the Luzon Economic Corridor project, supported by the United States and Japan, with Canada contributing C$2 million. He indicated that potential investment areas include data centers, logistics, and energy.On May 12, Premier Li Qiang sent a congratulatory message to Péter Majolóri, congratulating him on assuming office as Prime Minister of Hungary. Li Qiang stated that China has always regarded Hungary as an important partner in Europe and is willing to work with Hungary to carry forward traditional friendship, enhance political mutual trust, deepen pragmatic cooperation, and promote the steady and long-term development of China-Hungary relations to better benefit the people of both countries.ECB Governing Council member Pacharidis: There is a possibility that the ECB will not raise interest rates.On May 12, the State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters Office and the Ministry of Emergency Management organized a joint consultation with meteorological, water resources, and natural resources departments to assess the recent trend of heavy rainfall and deploy flood prevention and disaster reduction work in key areas. The consultation indicated that from May 12 to 14, parts of Jiangnan, South China, and eastern Guizhou are expected to experience heavy rain or torrential rain, with localized areas experiencing extremely heavy rain, accompanied by thunderstorms, strong winds, hail, and other severe convective weather. Attention should be paid to preventing flash floods, geological disasters, floods in small and medium-sized rivers, and urban flooding. The consultation emphasized strengthening the emergency response and follow-up feedback mechanisms for disaster warnings, conducting rolling joint consultations, strictly implementing the emergency response and follow-up feedback mechanism that reaches the grassroots level, focusing on evacuation and relocation, and resolutely and decisively relocating threatened people in accordance with the "four strict requirements." It also stressed strengthening the investigation and rectification of risks and hidden dangers, closely monitoring vulnerable sections of dikes, dangerous reservoirs, narrow flood channels, flash flood mouths, and key locations such as nursing homes, construction sites, temporary sheds, guesthouses, and tourist attractions, eliminating risks and hidden dangers before they escalate into disasters.The Eurozones ZEW Economic Situation Index for May was -41.4, compared to -43 in the previous month.

Hershey, Nestle, and Cargill win the dismissal of a claim of child slavery in the United States

Charlie Brooks

Jun 29, 2022 11:06


Tuesday, a federal judge in Washington, D.C. dismissed a case brought by eight Malians claiming child slavery on Ivory Coast cocoa plantations against Hershey Co (NYSE:HSY), Nestle SA (SIX:NESN), Cargill Inc, and others.


U.S. District Judge Dabney Friedrich determined that the proposed class action plaintiffs lacked legal standing to sue because they failed to prove a "traceable nexus" between the seven defendant companies and the individual farms where the plaintiffs worked.


She added that the plaintiffs did not adequately explain the role of intermediaries in the cocoa supply chain, and that the companies did not oversee actions in "free zones" where 70 to 80 percent of cocoa is farmed.


Mali and Ivory Coast share a border in West Africa.


The plaintiffs claimed they were trafficked as children after being approached by strangers who promised them employment for which they would be compensated, but did not pay them, threatened them with starvation if they did not work, and forced them to live in squalor.


Their attorney, Terry Collingsworth, said that the plaintiffs plan to file an appeal to "compel the businesses to keep their agreements and put an end to this dreadful system they have created."


Other defendants included Mars Inc, Mondelez International Inc (NASDAQ:MDLZ), Barry Callebaut AG, and Olam International Ltd.


In court filings, the seven defendants said that they "strongly abhor the practice of forced labor" and that they were addressing non-forced child labor in cocoa supply chains.


However, they contended that the plaintiffs' too broad legal theory may hold too many parties liable for forced child labor, including consumers and merchants who would benefit from lower prices.


In accordance with the Reauthorization of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, the plaintiffs filed suit.


The Supreme Court of the United States rejected a similar case brought by six Malians against Cargill and Nestle under the Alien Tort Statute of 1789 in June of last year.


This was the most recent in a line of judgments denying access to federal courts based on human rights breaches occurring outside the United States.


Coubaly et al. v. Cargill Inc. et al., U.S. District Court, District of Columbia, case number 21-00386.