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Uncover the British Post Office Scandal
and Queen Mathilde’s push for fair cocoa prices.
Explore how systemic failures disrupt lives
and call for justice.
1 One of the darkest secrets
Monday, 22 April 2024 By The Brussels Times with Belga
Queen Mathilde considers it a moral duty to pay cocoa farmers properly
Queen Mathilde urged delegates at the World Cocoa Conference in Brussels on Monday to ensure fair income for local farmers.
Queen Mathilde highlighted the dismal income that cocoa growers receive, with 90-95% of chocolate’s final price being distributed amongst merchants, producers, chocolatiers, and distributors. “Fairness demands an increase in the price paid to cocoa farmers,” she outlined.
Drawing from her recent trip to Côte d’Ivoire, the leading cocoa-producing country, the Queen pointed out that fair reward for local producers supports several Sustainable Development Goals, to which all nations are committed under the United Nations.
The aim is not merely to reduce poverty but also to address social and environmental concerns.
“Prices and sustainability are two sides of the same coin,” she continued.
“Every parent wants the best possible education for their children, and farmers everywhere understand their dependence on nature and biodiversity. But many are too impoverished, faced with the choice of sending their children to work in the fields instead of school, or deforestation instead of preserving the forest.”
The Queen also identified many areas where women’s role and skills could be better recognised and appreciated, whether in cocoa production, post-harvest handling or marketing.
Renowned in the cocoa and chocolate industry, the World Cocoa Conference will continue until Wednesday in Brussels. It brings together 1,000 sector professionals, including cocoa farmers, cooperatives, exporters, traders, manufacturers, brands and retailers. The International Cocoa Organisation (ICCO) has entitled this fifth edition ‘Paying more for sustainable cocoa’.
Koningin Mathilde beschouwt het als een morele plicht om cacaoboeren op een juiste manier te betalen
Koningin Mathilde drong er bij de afgevaardigden van de Wereld Cacao Conferentie in Brussel op maandag op aan om een eerlijk inkomen voor lokale boeren te waarborgen.
Koningin Mathilde benadrukte het povere inkomen dat cacaotelers ontvangen, waarbij 90-95% van de uiteindelijke prijs van chocolade wordt verdeeld onder handelaren, producenten, chocolatiers en distributeurs. “Eerlijkheid eist een verhoging van de prijs die aan cacaoboeren wordt betaald,” zo stelde ze.
Puttend uit haar recente reis naar Côte d’Ivoire, het belangrijkste cacaoproducerende land, wees de koningin erop dat een eerlijke beloning voor lokale producenten diverse Duurzame Ontwikkelingsdoelen ondersteunt, waartoe alle landen zich hebben verbonden onder de Verenigde Naties.
Het doel is niet alleen om armoede te verminderen, maar ook om sociale en milieuproblemen aan te pakken.
“Prijzen en duurzaamheid zijn twee zijden van dezelfde medaille,” vervolgde ze.
“Elke ouder wil het best mogelijke onderwijs voor hun kinderen, en boeren overal begrijpen hun afhankelijkheid van de natuur en biodiversiteit. Maar velen zijn te arm, geconfronteerd met de keuze om hun kinderen naar het veld te sturen in plaats van naar school, of ontbossing in plaats van het behoud van het bos.”
De koningin identificeerde ook vele gebieden waar de rol en vaardigheden van vrouwen beter erkend en gewaardeerd kunnen worden, of het nu gaat om cacaoproductie, nabewerking of marketing.
Beroemd in de cacao- en chocolade-industrie, zal de Wereld Cacao Conferentie tot woensdag doorgaan in Brussel.
Het brengt 1.000 sectorprofessionals samen, waaronder cacaoboeren, coöperaties, exporteurs, handelaren, fabrikanten, merken en retailers.
De Internationale Cacao Organisatie (ICCO) heeft deze vijfde editie de titel ‘Meer betalen voor duurzame cacao’ gegeven.
2 This could have been prevented
1 Paul Brand Reveals the True Impact of ‘Mr Bates vs the Post Office’ | Lorraine
25 jan 2024
It’s been just over three weeks since ITV’s drama ‘Mr Bates vs The Post Office’ first aired. Since then, the scandal has been on the front page of every national newspaper. Following the show and news coverage, 50 new potential victims have contacted lawyers.
This morning ITV News’ UK Editor Paul Brand joins Lorraine ahead of his Tonight programme ‘Mr Bates VS The Post Office: The Drama That Shocked Britain’ to discuss the power of a TV drama and why justice for these postal workers has taken so long.
2 Post Office inquiry: Former CEO didn’t like word “bugs” to refer to faulty IT system
23 apr 2024
The Inquiry into the Post Office scandal has heard that former chief executive Paula Vennells did not want to use the word “bugs” to refer to the faulty Horizon IT system, preferring “exceptions” instead.
Giving evidence today was the Post Office’s former lead internal lawyer – who said she believed her bosses had expected her to manipulate a review into Horizon by forensic investigators.
We watched her testimony with one wrongly-jailed subpostmaster.
3 Post Office Scandal: The Full Story (So Far)
Back to menu IMPORTANT CONTENT Listening recommended Must ***
14 feb 2024
The greatest miscarriage of justice in British legal history. In January of 2024, ITV launched the drama ‘Mr Bates VS the Post Office’ overnight the public responded to the heartbreaking stories of postmasters across the country. A battle nearly 700 sub-postmasters have been fighting since the late 1990s, was suddenly in the spotlight.
GMB spoke with politicians, journalists, sub-postmasters and Alan Bates himself, learning about the injustices suffered and the campaign heroes.
The Horizon Post Office Scandal is far from over, here is the full story so far…
4 Post Office: Barrister warns scandal extends ‘greatly’ beyond Horizon
23 apr 2024
A barrister representing sub-postmasters and sub-postmistresses has told Sky News there is evidence of faults with some “third-party” services in Post Office branches.
Paul Marshall said problems with the systems, such as ATMs and lottery tickets, had been “overlooked”.
He said that “the scandal extends considerably beyond, greatly beyond, it might be said, the limited focus of bugs in Horizon”.