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Nestle Zimbabwe's Mugabe Ties Get Company In Trouble

By Katherine Glover | Sep 29, 2009

Oops. It just came out that Nestle Zimbabwe sources 15 percent of its milk from a farm owned by the dictator-president’s wife, Grace Mugabe. The farm was confiscated from a white farmer as part of a political plan that has earned President Robert Mugabe condemnation from pretty much everyone else in the world.

This could be a big problem for Nestle. The dealings were most likely legal — the US and the EU have sanctions against both Mugabe and his wife, but Nestle is in Switzerland, which is not an EU member. Public opinion, however, is another matter. Several human rights activists have called for a boycott, and Nestle South Africa could be particularly vulnerable, as there appears to be a lot of public outcry there.

But Nestle says it had no choice.

“At the end of 2008 the company found itself operating in a market where 8 of its 16 contractual suppliers had gone out of business,” the company said in a statement. “As a result, in early 2009, Nestle was forced to purchase milk on the open market from a wide variety of suppliers on a non-contractual basis. This includes milk from the Gushungo Dairy estate.” It was either buy from Grace Mugabe or shut down, Nestle argues. “Had Nestle decided to close down its operations in Zimbabwe the company would have triggered further food shortages and hundreds of job losses.”

Still, many people aren’t buying it. And bad feelings still linger over Nestle’s decades-old baby formula marketing scandal, which inspired a worldwide boycott. That boycott technically hasn’t ended yet, but it’s certainly died down, and Nestle has done a lot to rebuild its public image. As FoodNavigator.com put it, the Mugabe scandal “could undo years of careful public relations and company strategy.”

Katherine Glover is a Minneapolis-based print, radio and online journalist. She's written for Salon.com, Sierra Magazine and many others, and she does a weekly blog on immigration issues for MinnPost.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • ZIMBABWE: Nestle admits to sourcing milk from Mugabe's wife

    Just Food - 57 days 18 hours 47 minutes ago

    Nestle today (28 September) revealed that it sources up to 15% of its milk supply in Zimbabwe from a farm owned by the wife of President Robert Mugabe

  • Nestle to stop Mugabe milk deal

    BBC - 54 days 1 hour 15 minutes ago

    Swiss multinational Nestle says it will stop buying milk from a farm owned by the wife of Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe. Nestle said it had bought milk from farms including Grace Mugabe's Gushungo Dairy Estate to help the country as its dairy industry neared collapse. The move comes after human rights activists had called for a boycott of...

  • ZIMBABWE: Nestlé ends Mugabe milk contract

    Just Food - 53 days 19 hours 35 minutes ago

    Nestlé Zimbabwe will no longer receive milk from farms owned by the wife of President Robert Mugabe

  • UPDATE: ZIMBABWE: Nestle to continue sourcing Mugabe milk

    Just Food - 57 days 16 hours 54 minutes ago

    Nestle, the Swiss food behemoth, has insisted the "crisis" in Zimbabwe's dairy sector means it will continue to source milk from a farm owned by the wife of President Robert Mugabe "for the forseeable future

  • Nestle unit pulls out of milk deal in Zimbabwe

    South China Morning Post - 53 days 10 hours 22 minutes ago

    Global food leader Nestle's Zimbabwean unit has stopped buying milk from a farm owned by President Robert Mugabe's wife that was seized under his controversial land reforms

 

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