Day 241 - 26 Apr 96 - Page 04
1 I took notes of my conversations with Miss Bensilum.
2 (There were three). I am prepared to give evidence and to
3 produce these notes". Do you still have the notes?
4 A. Unfortunately no, towards the end of 1993, the office
5 -- we had been taken over. We were previously owned by
6 Lonrho. We were taken over by The Guardian.
7
8 MR. RAMPTON: My Lord, I intervene to say I attach no weight to
9 the notes do not exist.
10
11 MR. JUSTICE BELL: Very well. They have been lost?
12 A. They were lost in a move along with a lot of other
13 material.
14
15 MS. STEEL: "Ms. Bensilum told me that Montecillos supplies six
16 restaurants in Costa Rica. She said the suppliers were
17 `under instructions not to supply meat from recently
18 deforested land'. I asked what was the definition of
19 `recent'. She replied: `within the last 25 years'.
20 She agreed that in the 1950's, the farms supplying
21 McDonald's Costa Rica through Montecillos had been
22 rainforest. She said: `I think the world would accept that
23 before that time it was rainforest. We have to accept
24 that. All we can do is ensure that (deforestation) doesn't
25 continue on our behalf'.
26 She said: `We only deal with suppliers who deal with
27 farms that have been long established ... about 25 years is
28 the definition we put on being recently deforested'.
29 I asked how this related to Montecillos. She said:
30 'The arrangements with that company, the beef with which
31 they supply us, comes from farms which were deforested in
32 the 1950's'. She said that Montecillos staff had given
33 undertakings they would not breach the 25 year rule.
34 McDonald's staff would visit Montecillos to ensure they
35 were complying with this stricture. If they didn't,
36 McDonald's would cease trading with them.
37 I asked what other tropical countries McDonald's had
38 outlets in. They were Malaysia, Guatemala, Venezuela and
39 Brazil (where there are 50 restaurants). The first
40 conversation ended with my asking when the 25 year policy
41 started, and what had been the policy before.
42 Eadie Bensilum phoned me back about an hour later,
43 towards the end of the afternoon. She said: `The policy as
44 it stands that our use of beef doesn't destroy rainforests
45 was formulated in 1988. Our policy has always been that
46 our business should not have an impact on rainforests'.
47 She said this general policy started in the 1950's.
48 I asked for more details. She phoned a third time.
49 She said that the US policy was always to use US beef
50 in US restaurants. But when the first restaurant opened in
51 Costa Rica in 1970, they were buying beef from farms
52 established between 1920 and 1960, i.e. only 10 years
53 earlier. This was policy until 1988. She said: `The
54 policy was more lax than it is now. There was still an
55 awareness of the need to deal with established farms; there
56 was less awareness generally in society of the rainforest
57 issue'."
58 Is this an accurate record of your conversation with
59 Miss Bensilum?
60 A. Yes, it is.