Chocolate now fuels war in West Africa?
                        Government 
                          and rebel forces in Ivory Coast used the cocoa trade 
                          
                          to fund war, says a new report.
                        By 
                          Blake Lambert | Correspondent of The Christian Science 
                          Monitor 
                           
                          Abidjan, Ivory Coast - First came "blood diamonds" 
                          from Sierra Leone. 
                        Rebels 
                          there partnered with former Liberian President Charles 
                          Taylor in the 1990s to receive weapons that they used 
                          to terrorize the population in exchange for the gems, 
                          which were sold globally to unwitting consumers. 
                          Then came "blood timber" from Liberia.
                        When 
                          the UN imposed sanctions on diamond exports from Liberia 
                          in 2001 Mr. Taylor - who is now standing trial for crimes 
                          against humanity in The Hague - plundered his country's 
                          forests to bankroll his brutal, cross-border wars. 
                        Now 
                          another West African conflict is being funded by yet 
                          another commodity beloved in the West: chocolate.
                        Government 
                          and rebel leaders of the world's leading cocoa exporter, 
                          Ivory Coast, both siphoned off millions of dollars from 
                          the cocoa industry to finance the 2002-03 civil war 
                          that divided the once-stable and prosperous country 
                          in two, according to a recent report from Global Witness, 
                          a London-based group that focuses on resource-fueled 
                          corruption.
                        
                          The government received more than $58 million from institutions 
                          and cocoa revenues, while the rebel New Forces pocketed 
                          about $30 million since 2004 in taxes and revenues, 
                          claims the report titled "Hot Chocolate: How Cocoa 
                          fuelled the conflict in Côte d'Ivoire." 
                        Ivory 
                          Coast is the world's leading producer of the commodity, 
                          responsible for about 40 percent of global exports, 
                          which earned more than $1 billion in 2006. 
                        Fighting 
                          here ended with the government of President Laurent 
                          Gbagbo in control of the south, where 90 percent of 
                          cocoa production takes place, and the rebel New Forces 
                          in charge of the north. The two sides signed a peace 
                          agreement in March that put rebel leader Guillaume Soro 
                          in the government as prime minister. 
                        Global 
                          Witness not only contends the cocoa trade drove the 
                          war economy but that the industry still serves the interests 
                          of both the government and the rebels who have reaped 
                          political and economic benefits with impunity. 
                        Yet 
                          loyalists of Mr. Gbagbo's government reacted to the 
                          findings with more bemusement than anger.
                         
 
                          
                          Rich Clabaugh - Staff