| 
             
			
			 Maryam, who is among the thousands of children a rights group says 
			work in hazardous conditions on farms in the world's fifth-biggest 
			producer of tobacco, spoke to Reuters in a field near the east Java 
			city of Probolinggo. 
			 
			"I feel dizzy, get headaches and feel like vomiting," said Maryam, 
			listing symptoms that match a condition experts call acute nicotine 
			poisoning, or "green tobacco sickness". 
			 
			Indonesia is one of the world's fastest-growing markets for tobacco 
			products, with about $16 billion of cigarettes sold last year in the 
			country of 250 million, an increase of 13 percent from 2014, says 
			market research firm Euromonitor International. 
			 
			But a lack of information leaves families oblivious to the risks 
			their children face while working on tobacco farms, said Margaret 
			Wurth, a researcher for New York-based Human Rights Watch. 
			
			  
			Several big companies lack procedures to screen out tobacco that 
			involves the effort of children working in hazardous conditions, the 
			group said in a report on Wednesday. 
			 
			"As a result, these companies risk contributing to the use of, and 
			benefiting from, hazardous child labor," it added. 
			 
			The group interviewed 227 people, among them 132 children aged 
			between 8 and 17, who said they worked on tobacco farms in four 
			Indonesian provinces. 
			 
			But the report risks generalizing the whole of Indonesia and some 
			children do work in non-hazardous conditions on tobacco farms, the 
			chairman of the Indonesian tobacco farmers' association, Soeseno, 
			told Reuters. 
			 
			"The root of the problem is poverty in certain small villages," he 
			said. 
			 
			Parents getting children to help is in line with cultural norms in 
			some areas, Soeseno, who goes by one name, like many Indonesians, 
			said by telephone. 
			 
			Customers do not normally ask whether child labor is involved, said 
			Suradi, a trader who buys tobacco from farmers in Probolinggo for 
			resale. 
			 
			"When I send the tobacco to the storehouse it only depends on the 
			quality," he told Reuters. 
			
            [to top of second column]  | 
            
             
  
				
			Human Rights Watch said it contacted some of the biggest companies 
			operating in Indonesia, such as Philip Morris International Inc, 
			Djarum Group and PT Gudang Garam Tbk. 
			 
			Philip Morris welcomed the report, sustainability officer Miguel 
			Coleta told Reuters, adding that the company sourced almost 70 
			percent of its tobacco through direct contracts with Indonesian 
			farmers, versus about 10 percent four years ago. 
			But change requires many stakeholders to cooperate, including the 
			Indonesian government, he added. "We are talking about a massive 
			market, millions of people," Coleta said in an interview. "It's not 
			something easy to reform overnight." 
			 
			Indonesian tobacco firms Djarum and Gudang Garam did not respond to 
			Reuters' requests for comment. 
			 
			In the tobacco field in Probolinggo, a dozen children helped to sow 
			seeds, earning about 10,000 to 15,000 rupiah ($0.73 to $1.10) for 
			working seven hours a day. 
			 
			"I work here just to help my parents and help to fulfill our needs," 
			said 15-year-old Waradatul Yaumi. 
			 
			(Reporting by Prasto Wardoyo in PROBOLINGGO and Eveline Danubrata in 
			JAKARTA; Additional reporting by Georgina Cooper in LONDON; Editing 
			by Clarence Fernandez) 
			[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			
			   |