Sweatshop Campaigners unite against Adidas' "Fundamentally flawed" workers rights summit

published 22-10-2012 15:45, last modified 25-04-2013 13:48
Anti-sweatshop campaigners from the US and Europe today united to condemn a summit to be held in Lausanne, Switzerland on Tuesday organised by adidas, intended to deal with the issues workers face when its supplier factories close. Whilst United Students Against Sweatshops, the Clean Clothes Campaign, War On Want and People & Planet welcome comprehensive, long-term solutions to workers’ rights abuses in adidas’ supply chain, they say the summit is “fundamentally flawed” and an “empty rhetorical gesture” as workers in Indonesia that made adidas products have been waiting for severance payments for over a year.
Sweatshop Campaigners unite against Adidas' "Fundamentally flawed" workers rights summit

Kizone workers protest, october 2012

The summit, convened by adidas is to discuss a new scheme, termed the Provident Fund, which the company claims “would provide coverage to workers affected by factory closures and non-payment of wages and benefits.”

The representatives of ex-workers from PT Kizone, a former adidas supplier in Indonesia, stated that “adidas’ meeting in the Alps is an attempt to distract from the fact that adidas is still refusing to pay us US$1.8 million that we earned while producing apparel for adidas”. Campaigners underline that it is indeed the company’s latest attempt at evading its responsibilities to pay the legally owed severance owed to the 2,800 ex-workers from this supplier, even though other buyers have already paid nearly half the amount owed to the workers. To be meaningful, the summit would need to involve Kizone worker representatives, who are currently not invited to attend. The Provident Fund adidas proposes cannot replace the severance payment to the Kizone workers, as it remains adidas' responsibility to provide redress for rights violations that have already happened.

The case of the workers at the PT Kizone factory has been subject to a high profile international campaign involving 50,000 people signing a petition to pressure adidas to pay up. Two US universities, Cornell and Oberlin, have committed to cut ties with adidas and another, Wisconsin, is taking adidas to court.

Garrett Strain from USAS said "adidas’ subcontracted workers are not demanding Alpine summits – they’re demanding the severance they are legally owed. We will not allow adidas to use this summit as a means of evading responsibility for its legal obligations to pay severance to the former PT Kizone workers."
Liz Parker from CCC said “By organising a summit to develop a long term solution adidas appears to be trying to prove that it is behaving responsibly towards the workers that make its products, but it is not paying the Kizone workers what they’re owed! This should,be the first step to take. ”

Murray Worthy, sweatshops campaigner at War on Want said “We will continue to fight against the appalling exploitation and abuse of workers’ rights in adidas supply chains. Together we will keep up the pressure in the US and Europe until adidas pays its former workers the millions they are owed.”

Ruth Fox from People & Planet said “students across the UK will continue to campaign against adidas until they pay their former workers what they are owed. They will not be bought off by spin and whitewash”.

Filed under: , ,
See also
Japanese retail giant Uniqlo shows contempt towards garment workers just prior to AGM Japanese retail giant Uniqlo shows contempt towards garment workers just prior to AGM

On 14 November 2018, Uniqlo walked away from a mediation process in Jakarta without making a ...

Labour groups call for full remedy in Indonesian labour dispute involving adidas and Mizuno Labour groups call for full remedy in Indonesian labour dispute involving adidas and Mizuno

After six years of campaigning, the former union of a notorious adidas and Mizuno supplier in ...

Clean Clothes Campaign files complaint against Adidas for breaching OECD guidelines in Indonesia Clean Clothes Campaign files complaint against Adidas for breaching OECD guidelines in Indonesia

Indonesia Factsheet February 2015

 Top global sports brands adidas and Mizuno shamefully defy international standards on workers’ rights in Indonesia Top global sports brands adidas and Mizuno shamefully defy international standards on workers’ rights in Indonesia

Clean Clothes Campaign issues the following statement in response to the refusal of adidas and ...

Open letter: After five years, it is high time to pay severance to 345 workers who made adidas and Mizuno shoes Open letter: After five years, it is high time to pay severance to 345 workers who made adidas and Mizuno shoes

Today five years ago, a group of Indonesian workers started a strike after their employer had ...

German brands s.Oliver and Gerry Weber targeted by protesters in Indonesia German brands s.Oliver and Gerry Weber targeted by protesters in Indonesia

Two Indonesian trade unions organised a protest in front of the German Embassy in Jakarta today (30 ...

Activists demand UNIQLO pay workers what they are due Activists demand UNIQLO pay workers what they are due

On International Women's Day a coalition of global campaigners are organising a series of actions ...

What happened to the workers in Indonesia? What happened to the workers in Indonesia?

Read the insights about the 346 women and men in Indonesia demanding fair compensation from ...

Nike, adidas and Puma's workers earn poverty wages to pay for European championship endorsements Nike, adidas and Puma's workers earn poverty wages to pay for European championship endorsements

The three main sportswear sponsors of the UEFA European championship 2016, Nike, adidas and Puma, ...

more ...