Make Poverty History: New Wristband Scandal
Red Pepper | 11.06.2005 00:37 | G8 2005
The wristbands in question, personally endorsed by Bob Geldof and Hunter, have been on sale since Monday 6 June for £2 at every store of Hunter’s high-street fashion retail outlet, USC, and his shoe chain, Office. A quotation from Geldof is printed on the perspex display box in which the special edition Live8 wristbands are displayed:
‘When you buy this band you promise me you will do everything you can to get on the road to Edinburgh and join us in changing the world. This rubber band is your solemn word, you are now part of Live8, well done!’
The wristbands feature the standard Make Poverty History logo with the Live8 logo, but are also stamped with the logos of six global fashions brands including the controversial Hilfiger Denim, owned by Tommy Hilfiger Corporation.
According to Stephen Coats, Executive Director of the Chicago-based US/Labor Education in the Americas Project that monitors and supports the basic rights of workers in Latin America, Hilfiger’s labour record falls short of minimum standards:
‘In our experience, Tommy Hilfiger is at the bottom of the list in demonstrating refusal to accept responsibility for the way workers are treated.’
Back in October 2003, the company was accused by labour rights campaigners of cutting and running from its responsibilities to workers when evidence was uncovered of labour abuses at the Tarrant blue jean factory in Ajalpan, Mexico.
The revelations have once again left Make Poverty History campaigners angry at the contamination of their high-profile symbol by its association with anti-labour companies.
John Hilary, Director of Campaigns and& Policy at UK development NGO, War on Want, a leading member of Make Poverty History told Red Pepper: ‘This is a really worrying development for an organisation like War on Want, which campaigns for workers' rights across the world. Unless Tommy Hilfiger's record has improved significantly without our knowing, it's not the sort of company we'd want to be associated with.’
Make Poverty History members are still in the dark about how Hunter’s special edition Live8 wristband got the go ahead from Comic Relief, whicho controls all intellectual property rights associated with the coalition’s logo.
Hunter, 43, who made his estimated £678 million fortune by selling his Sports Division sportswear chain for £290 million in 1998, has offered his personal guarantee that ‘all the proceeds of these special edition live8 bands will support this stunning campaign’. Hunter aims to sell a one million wristbands before the 2 July Hyde Park extravaganza.
The other fashion brands featured on the special edition wristband are Henry Lloyd, Firetrap, Diesel, G-star and Replay. None of the companies, including Hilfiger Denim, are listed as members of the UK Ethical Trading Initiative, an alliance of companies, NGOs and trade unions cooperating to ensure that the conditions of workers producing for the UK market meet or exceed international labour standards.
This fresh controversy over the Make Poverty History wristband is bound to put the spotlight on the role of Tom Hunter and other corporate figures in the campaign. A prodigious charity giver, last year Hunter gave away a fifth of his fortune to good causes, becoming Britain’s biggest charitable donor. In addition to the £1 million pledged to the Make Poverty History campaign, he recently gave a further £6 million to a Comic Relief school-building programme in Africa.
Hunter’s political views, however, may cause some discomfort to Make Poverty History supporters. His charity, The Hunter Foundation, is an almost evangelical force behind public-private partnerships in Scotland, and since 2001, has helped fund the Scottish Executive’s Schools Enterprise Programme in which the private sector helps teach children as young as five how to set up and run their own business.
As Red Pepper will show in its forthcoming July special G8 edition, these revelations come as little surprise. For the past six months, some of the UK’s leading development and environmental NGOs have been privately expressing their unease about a campaign high on celebrity octane but low on radical politics.
In addition to a critical look at the politics and personalities behind the Make Poverty History coalition, Red Pepper's forthcoming July special edition - G8: the New Scramble for Africa - will feature articles by respected Ghanian political economist, Yao Graham, on the G8's neo-colonialist agenda for Africa, Lucy Michaels of Corporate Watch on the disreputable corporations lobbying behind the G8 and Commission for Africa, Melanie Jarman on why the G8 won't be solving climate change, Natasha Grzincic on Red Pepper's guide to the G8 protests, and much, much more.
Red Pepper will soon be launching a live web blog for the G8 protests. Keep watching www.redpepper.org.uk
Red Pepper
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stuart@redpepper.org.uk
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http://www.redpepper.org.uk/global/x-jun05-wristbands.htm
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