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Protest planned at Coca-Cola launch, 19-2-04

Markmedic | 18.02.2004 12:44 | Ecology | Globalisation | Social Struggles | Sheffield

Coca-Cola are planning a stunt to launch Dasani a new bottled water. The Columbian Solidarity Campaign, are planning a protest at 12 noon on Thursday at the Peace Gardens to coincide with the launch on behalf of eight assasinated trade unioun workers and their families. They accuse Coca Cola of impeding the progress of programmes to clean up drinking water forcing millions to drink soft drinks.

On 17/02/04 at 20:38 John Smith wrote:

>Please note the following forwarded message from the Colombia Solidarity
>Campaign. There WILL BE a protest at the Peace Gardens to coincide with
>Coca-Cola's stunt... please get there if you can; please cascade this
>message to everyone you feel should know. Within hours of launching the
>protest, hundreds of people in Sheffield already know of it. By teatime
>tomorrow it will be thousands.
>
>A comment: there is something deeply ironic about Coke's launching of a
>new line of purified tap water. Colombia's food workers' union,
>SINALTRAINAL, charges Coca-Cola with impeding programmes in various Latin
>American countries aimed at cleaning up the polluted drinking water that
>forces millions of people to instead consume soft drinks.... and just a
>few days ago the Indian government upheld charges that Coca-Cola was
>selling soft drinks that are contaminated with pesticides and other
>toxins, at up to 40 times the level permitted in the EU. Coke's head of
>operations in India complained that the Indian government shouldn't be
>making a fuss about contaminants in its products. "Most of India's
>drinking water is unfit for human consumption but the politicians have
>found it more convenient to go for the global brand names," he said.
>
>
>
>Forwarded from Colombia Solidarity Campaign...
>
>Dear friends in Sheffield and area,
>
>Coca Cola wants to promote its new water product Dasani through a show in
>Sheffield this Thursday lunchtime. The company is using dare-devil divers
>to get a lot of publicity in local and national press.
>
>On behalf of the families of eight assassinated Colombian trade unionists
>and their trade union SINALTRAINAL we call for protests at the launch and
>an immediate boycott of Dasani and all other Coke products. Coke has got
>blood on its hands.
>
>SINALTRAINAL demands that Coca Cola:
>
> a.. publicly recognises that it benefited from the crimes committed by
>paramilitary groups continually carried out against the human rights of
>the workers and the communities
> b.. pays compensation for the damages caused
> c.. hands over to justice those criminals who carried out actions to its
>benefit
> d.. commits itself to not making any new attacks on our people and
>negotiates with the union ways to protect life, with international
>witnesses.
>The launch will be at Peace Gardens, Pinstone Street from 12 noon.
>
>Please let me or local contacts know if you can come.
>
>We have bulletins and (some) placards, and we are printing new leaflets
>tomorrow (Wednesday) and can arrange to get them all to you.
>
>The bigger and noisier the turn out the better.
>
>Andy Higginbottom
>Secretary, Colombia Solidarity Campaign
>
>(For further information see Coke Activists Pack
> http://colombiasolidarity.org.uk/cocacolacampaign.html and Colombia
>Solidarity Bulletin No 11
> http://colombiasolidarity.org.uk/Solidarity%2011/SolidarityNo11.html)
>
>
>"SM" reports: This is Coke's offering for the health conscious. This isn't
>actually a natural mineral water, rather they strip the impurities from
>tap water and then add the minerals. Ooh err! The corporate spiel that I
>was handed at work says that they can turn the flow on or off at the touch
>of a button allowing them to optimise production for warm periods. Expect
>a huge campaign in then next couple of months, big enough to rival the
>relaunch of Walkers Cheese and Onion crisps. They make the process sound
>all nice and expensive, expensive for us customers, nice - tastes awful,
>like Vittel but even nastier (I didn't think it possible, but it's true!)

Markmedic
- e-mail: markmedic@burngreave.net

Comments

Hide the following 4 comments

Drink ?

18.02.2004 18:16

If we get thirsty during the demo is it OK to drink Pepsi (It is the choice of a new generation)

Dave


To Drink, or Not To Drink?

18.02.2004 22:19

"If you don't like coke, why don't you just not drink it. It is the most logical thing to do. "

Please read. The boycott is nothing to do with anyone not liking Coca Killer.

"Is this Coke protest organised by Pepsi by any chance. How about Richard Branson and his Virgin Cola?"

No as explained it is organised by Colombian groups opposed to the killing of their workers. Does Richard Branson or Pepsi kill their workers?

Brian B


Boycott Coca Cola

19.02.2004 04:44

Also see the Boycott Israel Campaign

 http://www.inminds.co.uk/boycott-coca-cola.html

observer
- Homepage: http://www.inminds.co.uk/boycott-coca-cola.html


unnessasary crap...

20.02.2004 17:44

After spending an hour picking up just coca cola bottles (mostly it was their dusani water bottles) what i would like to point out is that the huge amount of litter that not only coke but mcdonalds and other fast food/confectionery companies create. By giving out *free* bottles they are handing out plastic to people who do not need a drink or do not want a drink but are having a drink just because it is free and then putting the bottle on the ground or in a landfill. I then presented my litter pickings to the organisers and the police who then intimidated and humiliated me for asking what they could do about companies like coke (and others) that are creating this huge amount of unnessasary crap.
So after attempting to confront those that were handing out the bottles i have decided that a better form of protest against these companies could be used. We all know the crap that they produce so i ask would it be better picking up their litter and handing it back to them? or would it be better printing out loads more leaflets and creating more mess and telling people the crap that these companies create?
I would much prefer actually showing the companies themselves the type of rubbish they create that never gets picked up. If you have been in the sheffield city centre and the surrounding areas then you will know that there are black spots where street cleaners rarely go - or if they do then their skills are not adequet because there is still huge amounts of rubbish. An example of one of these areas is the area around castle market.

cb
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