BAD BAD NEWS! East Ham High Street (just down the road from my home in East London) will open Europe's biggest Primark to date. All together now - WHAT THE F... You know how this line ends. Not only will this giant superstore take out many of the local, smaller, independent retailers (Bingo will be rubble, and I fear for my local Pound Express), the inevitable success of this monstrosity will only illustrate further tolerance to Primark's intolerable history of sweatshop labour - an issue I've been following for a while now.
So for now, there was no better place in London to be than at the Primark protest (coverage here) outside the TUC building (Trade Union Congress Centre); I was representing Ctrl.Alt.Shift, joining forces with various anti-sweatshop groups to breathe down the necks of Primark's shameless shareholders - all of which had little to say to our Bangladeshi friends, flown in especially from their torrid and abuse-ridden working lives to tell their story, and demand justice from the source. It was freezing (and my Mauritian blood can't handle a minor chill), but I was in good company, chanting, placard in hand alongside rebel-with-a-cause Ben Anderson and the lovely Tara Scott from Labour Behind The Label. Here's the review of the day:
Ctrl.Alt.Shift @ Primark Protest
Whether it's 29p an hour for their workers in India, or recent allegations of 7p an hour for their Bangladeshi graftsmen, activists arrived geared up and prepped to voice their outrage at Primark's exploitative and despicable policies outside the TUC building (Trade Union Congress Centre) in central London this morning - just as those in the ivory towers of the corporation sat down for their cosy AGM.
No Sweat, Labour Behind the Label, War on Want and Ctrl.Alt.Shift (among other justice-seeking organisations) were all present, placards and banners in hand, never deterred by some of Primark’s shamed shareholders trying to shoo the loud and proud protesters away.
The high street giants have made around £233 million this year. Yet according to War on Want, a pitiful amount of that sum goes towards paying the average worker in developing countries £19.16 a month. This does very little to improve the already appalling conditions (and abuse in some circumstances) of the men, women and children striving away to make those fabulous Primark sequin dresses we see in the shop window - shoppers of the UK can go home delighted with a new buy, while the majority of Primark's hustlers will walk home after a 14 hour shift to small, crowded shacks, many lacking plumbing and adequate washing facilities.
What is most frustrating about this picture is how Primark will not own up and pay dividends for what they have done. They even have the nerve to call themselves an ethical company on www.ethicalprimark.co.uk. But today proved their wool will no longer be pulled over the eyes of the good people.
Chants echoed around the TUC of "Primark! Cut the spin!" and "What do we want? Living wage! When do we want it? NOW!" When a Primark shareholder came out to hold the fort (in a feeble attempt to justify Primark's actions by claiming they were not responsible for business procedures overseas), the campaigners seized upon his distasteful words with "Quit passing the buck!" and "Use your profit to pay the workers!"
Read the full article here
12/05/2008
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