NationStates Jolt Archive


"Make poverty history" wristbands made in sweatshops

The Holy Womble
31-05-2005, 20:23
Ever wondered who makes those "Make poverty history" wristbands?

Anti-poverty wristbands produced in sweatshops (http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/uk.cfm?id=588782005)

FASHIONABLE wristbands worn by pop stars, actors, top athletes and celebrities to publicise the Make Poverty History campaign are produced in appalling "slave labour" conditions, damning evidence has revealed.

Chinese factory workers producing the white rubber bracelets are forced to toil in conditions that violate Chinese law and the Ethical Trading Initiative (ETI) set up to establish international standards for working conditions.

The revelations are laid bare in sensitive "ethical audits" of factories that make the must-have fashion accessories for the national Make Poverty History campaign begun by a partnership of over 400 charities.

Hearing of the news yesterday, Sir Bob Geldof, called for immediate measures to improve the terms and conditions of the workers with the threat of all business being withdrawn if the response is unsatisfactory.

He said: "The charities should pull out of the deals with those companies immediately or set a firm deadline for improvements and pull out if the improvements are not met."

A leading executive in one British charity also condemned the revelations as "deeply shocking". He went on to blame Oxfam, Christian Aid and Cafod of "rank hypocrisy" for dealing with sweat shops while calling for fair and ethical trade.

Prime Minister Tony Blair and First Minister Jack McConnell have been photographed wearing the bands, as well as celebrities including model Claudia Schiffer, actress Sienna Miller, the band Travis, and football managers Alex McLeish and Martin O'Neill.

A host of Scottish celebrities also posed for a Sunday Mail campaign to end world poverty wearing the bands yesterday, including Gaby Logan, David Coulthard, Kirsty Gallacher and Jenni Falconer, although they were not aware of the conditions of manufacture.

Hundreds of thousands of the bands have been sold in the UK for £1, which includes a 70p donation to charitable causes.

According to a report on the Tat Shing Rubber Manufacturing Company in Shenzhen, near Hong Kong, dated 12 April 2005, the company uses "forced labour" by accepting "financial deposits" from new workers - against both Chinese law and the ETI.

The report also revealed a category of weaknesses including inadequate health and safety provision, lengthy hours, seven-day weeks, employees cheated of their pay, inadequate insurance, no annual holidays and no right to freedom of association.

Another audit at the Fuzhou Xing Chun Trade Company in Fujian province found workers were paid at below the local minimum hourly wage of 2.39 yuan (under 16p) and some as little as 1.39 yuan (9p).

The revelations have now caused infighting between the various charities, with Christian Aid claiming Oxfam failed to tell other charities that it had decided to stop ordering from the Shenzhen company.

A spokesman said: "If Oxfam had concerns about ethical standards it did not pass them on for a considerable time."

An Oxfam spokeswoman responded that they informed their coalition partners in January, but added: "We could have perhaps put it in writing to make it absolutely clear. We bought an initial 10,000 wrist bands from the Shenzhen company in November. We now see that purchasing this before we saw a full audit was a mistake."

Instead, it sourced 1.5 million of the bands - made from silicon rubber or woven fabric - from the Fujian factory, but only after assurances that concerns over ethical problems were being addressed. Christian Aid and Cafod continue to source the bands from the Shenzhen factory as part of a "constructive engagement" policy.

A Christian Aid spokesman added: "We realise there is a problem but we have taken action to minimise it."




Just some food for thought about the nature of the modern "social justice activism".


Another food for thought: how bad should the working conditions be to violate Chinese law?
Heron-Marked Warriors
31-05-2005, 20:47
How ironic, and sadly indicative of the modern world.
Jordaxia
31-05-2005, 20:51
Ok, I'm not going to make a two wrongs make a right argument in extreme. I'll just make a point. At least this way they're getting some money to make a living.


However, they are entitled to a decent, living wage, not subsistence, and the charities who have these bands made should work immediately, and concertedly, to improve the conditions.
Nova Roma
31-05-2005, 20:55
omg i nkow taht suocre iz baised!
Seangolia
31-05-2005, 20:57
Another food for thought: how bad should the working conditions be to violate Chinese law?

Actually, contrary to popular belief, China is that bad. It's hardly a third-world country, and it's people(for the most part) live in pretty decent conditions. Of course, when laws are broken(China has rather strict laws regarding things like this, btw), it's a bit different, but China is hardly a poverty-stricken nation.
DHomme
31-05-2005, 21:14
Ive already posted on this... havent I?
The Abomination
31-05-2005, 21:14
For several months my family lorded it over me with those damn bands, occupying their supposedly infallible moral high ground.

Now I have had the last laugh.

As to the poor buggers in the sweatshops - I have a feeling they wouldn't care quite so much if the western media didn't broadcast the relative prosperity of the west in their faces the whole time. It'd be politer than flaunting it, certainly.

Just a thought.
Heron-Marked Warriors
31-05-2005, 21:20
omg i nkow taht suocre iz baised!

Translator, please?
Makatoto
31-05-2005, 21:22
Oh My God, I know that source is biased!

Unless you were being sarcastic, in which case I apologise.
New Watenho
31-05-2005, 21:23
omg i nkow taht suocre iz baised!

I thought he was trying to prove that theory that if the first and last letters of a word are in the right place then it's possible to glance-read no matter how jumbled-up the rest are. Or possibly being sarcastic :D
Heron-Marked Warriors
31-05-2005, 21:24
Oh My God, I know that source is biased!

Unless you were being sarcastic, in which case I apologise.

I was being sarcastic. Don't worry about it.

I wonder if people who post in that crap actually think it makes a point?
New Watenho
31-05-2005, 21:28
I know you were, bird-brain*! I meant Nova Roma!

*no offence intended; I just saw your name and had to :D
Heron-Marked Warriors
31-05-2005, 21:33
I know you were, bird-brain*! I meant Nova Roma!



*no offence intended; I just saw your name and had to :D

Oh. Ok.

And there was me thinking you were helpful :( ....
Heron-Marked Warriors
31-05-2005, 21:35
I thought he was trying to prove that theory that if the first and last letters of a word are in the right place then it's possible to glance-read no matter how jumbled-up the rest are. Or possibly being sarcastic :D

Doesn't explain "nkow"...
New Watenho
31-05-2005, 21:39
Whoops. I appear to have replied to you talking to the wrong person. How embarrassing.

I am helpful! Just... a bit of an idiot, too, especially during exam season. I've been posting, making notes, posting, making notes... sorry! :(

As for "nkow", well, I guess he's a bad typist as well as someone who likes to be creative with spelling. Or, obeying Occam's razor, maybe just a bad typist... hmm, I'll retract my original theory, then.

/hijack

As for the bracelets, well, I actually said to all my self-righteous friends who got them "I bet you they're made in a sweatshop somewhere" and they doubted me, claiming of course they couldn't be, that'd defeat the object somewhat. I feel vindicated, but somewhat Pyhrrically.
Chellis
31-05-2005, 21:40
Well, think of it this way. If those in poverty are making them, and you buy them from them, its helping them(Depending if you believe in trickle-down economics, etc).
Niccolo Medici
31-05-2005, 21:40
Perhaps I'm an evil bastard, but I wish now to purchase one of those wristbands...or perhaps many, and hand them out to my co-workers.

I also want a movie based on this incident, with the workers at the factory (We'll use child actors or pregnant women, for increased ironic value) discover just what it is they are making and for whom.

I'm a little torn between said workers leading a revolt, unionizing, or simply dying from laughter, but I'll leave that descision for the director.