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Sweatshops still supplying high street

More than a decade after sweatshop labour for top brands became a mainstream issue, the problem still seems endemic across the global clothing and footwear sector Marks and Spencer’s, Next, Ralph Lauren, DKNY, GAP, Converse, Banana Republic, Land’s End, Levi’s. And so the list of brands go on and on. What do they all have in common? According to a deeply depressing report (pdf) by the International Textile Garment and Leather Workers’ Federation (ITGLWF), the factories in Asia contracted to make their products are still responsible for shocking working practices. More than a decade after sweatshop labour for high street brands became a mainstream issue, and after plenty of companies have instituted monitoring of their supply chains, the problem still seems endemic right across the global clothing and footwear sector. Many of the factories supplying the brands likely to dominate the Olympics in 2012, such as Adidas, Nike, Slazenger, Speedo and Puma, “are routinely breaking every rule in the book when it comes to labour rights”, according to the ITGLWF. The list of brands ultimately sourcing from the 83 factories surveyed in the report is so comprehensive, it seems to make a mockery of the whole idea that the high street has cleaned up its act. Factories in three countries – the Philippines, Indonesia and Sri Lanka – were surveyed, and not one of them paid a living wage to their combined 100,000-strong workforce. Many of them didn’t even pay the legal minimum wage. What the report also makes clear is that this is a gender issue: 76% of the surveyed workforce are women. Globalised supply chains exploit predominantly female labour. It’s an irony that probably escapes most of the women who do the bulk of high street shopping in the west. Women shopping for products made by other, underpaid, exploited, women. What’s more, things seem to be getting worse, rather than better. Employment is becoming more precarious as more workers are put on to temporary contracts, day labour, on call rather than with permanent jobs. That enables employers to dodge holiday pay, sick pay and written contracts. Employers also imposed compulsory overtime, lower wages and higher production targets on workers on these short-term contracts. Such precarious employment makes it harder for trade unions to organise and recruit, because contracts are not renewed if the worker has been involved in trade union activity. On average, 25% of workers in Indonesia were short-term or temporary, while in the Philippines it rose to 85% in one factory, 50% at another. In Sri Lanka, wages were paid on productivity targets – despite such a practice being illegal. At one factory in Girigara, basic pay was cut if targets set by the management were not achieved. At another factory owned by the same company in Katunayake, workers didn’t receive any incentive pay unless the entire quota was reached, but workers reported that the targets were impossible to meet so they never got their bonuses, even if they missed toilet breaks and rest periods to try and reach the target. At other factories, workers were forced to work overtime to meet productivity targets. The report found that excessive overtime was the “norm” in sportswear and leisurewear factories in Indonesia; workers in all the factories surveyed were doing between 10 and 40 hours of overtime a week. There were incidents of mental and physical abuse when workers failed to reach production targets – in one factory, 40 workers were locked in an unventilated room without access to toilet facilities, water and food for over three hours as a punishment. In Sri Lanka, workers were forced to work up to 130 hours per month in overtime, and anyone asking to leave would be verbally harassed. In the Philippines, 24% of workers said that they did not receive additional pay for their overtime. Typical hours can be 6am to 8pm. Many of the workers at these factories in Sri Lanka are young women from rural areas. They are told when recruited that the factories prefer them not to marry, and some companies even carry out pregnancy tests to weed out pregnant women. Sexual intimidation and abuse was common. In many cases, the employers’ behaviour was illegal, but the report – which picked factories at random – points out that what makes laws effective is a well resourced inspection regime. Without inspection, legislation is meaningless. It’s worth adding at the end of this catalogue of abuse that the UK Department for International Development (DfID) has just axed funding to the International Labour Organisation , one of the oldest international bodies in the world trying to improve labour standards. The ILO brings out a report on Friday in conjunction with the Asian Development Bank on women’s employment patterns across Asia and inequality. Retail industry Sri Lanka Philippines Indonesia International trade Madeleine Bunting guardian.co.uk

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BSkyB growth raises News Corp stakes

Revenue and subscriber growth puts pressure on Rupert Murdoch to improve offer when government clears takeover deal BSkyB has reported strong growth in the three months to the end of March, adding pressure on Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation to improve its 700p-per-share offer when culture secretary Jeremy Hunt gives final clearance for the takeover to go ahead. BSkyB added a total of 51,000 new customers in the first quarter – ahead of most analysts’ expectations – as revenue grew 12.8% year on year to £1.65bn and underlying earnings grew by 5% to £344m. On an adjusted basis, pre-tax profits were down 32.7% year on year to £238m due to exceptional items in the first quarter last year such as the sale of most of BSkyB’s 17.9% stake in ITV. The BSkyB chief executive, Jeremy Darroch, said that the satellite broadcaster had delivered “another good performance in what has clearly been a tough consumer environment”. Operating profit climbed from £249m to £261m. However, with Hunt expected to imminently announce official clearance for News Corporation to proceed with tabling an offer for the 61% in BSkyB that it does not already own, analysts are keenly keeping an eye on key metrics such as earnings per share. BSkyB reported a record adjusted basic EPS of 30.5p, a 30% year-on-year increase. “A continuation of this kind of trend [strongly growing EPS], will confirm that BSkyB is entering a harvesting period in terms of returns,” said Thomas Singlehurst, an analyst at Citigroup. In addition average revenue per user – a key metric for analysts – increased 8% year on year to £544. In the nine months to the end of March BSkyB said it spent a total of £12m on various costs relating to the approach from News Corp. BSkyB, which has a total customer base of 10.1m, said that 26% of customers now take a “triple play” of TV, broadband and home phone. Overall, BSkyB added 155,000 new broadband customers and 159,000 telephony customers, while 189,000 customers signed up to Sky+HD. BSkyB’s churn rate – customers leaving the company – grew slightly in the quarter to 10.4%. BSkyB also pointed to huge growth in advertising revenue income – bolstered massively by the acquisition of Living TV Group last year – reporting 41% year-on-year growth in the nine months to the end of March to £348m. Darroch said that he saw no problem with Sky News being spun off as an independent operation – an undertaking News Corp agreed to in order to gain clearance on media plurality grounds from Hunt. “From my perspective I don’t see why Sky News shouldn’t go on and prosper in the future how it does today,” he said. “I can’t see why it can’t be very, very successful as a standalone business.” He added that the Sky News business has always been run as an independent entity – if not in financial terms – in any case. “It is one of the reasons Sky News has been so successful in the long term: people see it as a reliable, independent source of news,” he said. BSkyB said it expects to make £10m in profit from the sale of its 13% stake in Shine – the production company owned by Elisabeth Murdoch acquired by her father Rupert’s News Corp earlier this month . •

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Barry Soetoro

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Barry Soetoro

My Application For A Job With The Illuminati You’re Sick, Evil, Repulsive, Horrendous, Corrupt & Vile, Australian Mainstream Media Great Poet, Thinker, Philosopher, Victim Of Gang Stalkers, & Targeted Individual, Ezra Pound Barry Soetoro AKA Barack Obama Still Has Plenty of Questions to … Barry Soetoro AKA Barack Obama has a pretty smile and mobsters for friends, and unfortunately became the president of the United States of America. By way of trickery and slick use of the English language, he has managed to fo. Chris Matthews left wing liberal nut job… – Barry Soetoro Home · Anti-Christ · Barry Soetoro Birth Certificate · Barry Soetoro is a Christian? Being Liberal · Bullshit Bingo · Economy · Muslim B.S. · Obama Deception · Racism · SPOOF’S · Video · Worst Presidents · About Us · Shopping … 33 QUESTIONS FOR THE PRESIDENT: MARSHALL FRANK….SEE NOTE PLEASE … You moved to Indonesia where you attended interfaith schools and were registered as Barry Soetoro . Your religion was registered as “Islam.” You remained there until age ten, at which time you returned to Hawaii to live with your … President Obama Releases a Birth Certificate | _ Obama was adopted and his name was changed to Barry Soetoro . Back in that day Indonesia had no dual citizenship, therefore Obama became a citizen of Indonesia. When he and his mother returned to the United States he was sporting an … Obama AKA Soetoro AKA Soebarkah: What We Do Know… Factcheck This … We do know when Obama was living in Indonesia with his mom and step-father, Indonesian citizen, Lolo Soetoro, Obama was listed as “ Barry Soetoro ” and as an Indonesian citizen on his school registration in Indonesia. … WHATRULOOKING4 says: – obama releases birth certificate – total gym – federal reserve – ben bernanke – news channel 9 – barry soetoro…

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April 26, 1986 – Learning A New Word: Chernobyl.

enlarge The eerie, perplexing testament. Click here to view this media Before April 26th 1986, Chernobyl was a word hardly anybody ever heard. But within days it became the only word on peoples minds. In what was first passed off as “nothing” quickly escalated as reports from outside the Soviet Union filtered in what was to become the worst Nuclear Power Plant disaster in history. Here are several reports – the first starting with a small mention on the CBS World News Roundup of April 27th and then picks up with acknowledgment from the Soviet Union on the 29th of April – three days after the initial event. Bill Lynch (CBS News – April 29th): “Even Radio Moscow is now using the word disaster to describe the massive release of radiation from a nuclear reactor in the Ukraine, the Soviet bread basket. The dimensions of that disaster are becoming more clear today. One Soviet diplomat called it the “worst nuclear accident in history”. A West German nuclear safety expert says what happened north of Kiev last weekend appears to be even more serious than the worst case scenarios scientists predicted for such plants. A Swedish diplomat in Moscow says Soviet officials there told him it was worse than a meltdown.” Twenty-five years later, Chernobyl stands as mute testimony, an exclusion zone and a sarcophagus . And how is Fukushima doing these days? If you found this post useful, informative, or mildly enlightening, consider making a donation to this site so it can keep doing what it’s doing. You can help make a difference.

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Another view: The Changing Room

Janek Schaefer missed out the all-important banter in his meditation on the locker-room experience I felt a bit let down by this. Sound artist Janek Schaefer has made an installation inside Bath University , inspired by his exploration of sports changing rooms: what they look like, what they sound like, what they signify. I was really interested to see what he’d come up with – most changing-rooms I’ve used are pretty disgusting – so I took three of the people I coach: a rugby player, a runner, and my seven-year-old son. The first problem we had was that we couldn’t actually find the exhibition – Schaefer has installed his changing room (just two walls, some pegs and a locker) in an empty space between the foyer and the cafe. We got there and thought, “Is this it?” Two doors in one of the exhibition’s walls lead to the toilets: my girlfriend went to the loo without realising it was meant to be part of the show. Most people were wandering past oblivious, but we stayed and pressed the buttons Schaefer has installed, each of which emits a different sound. Press one, and you hear a woman talking about training on her bike; press another, and you hear a motivational slogan: “Winners finish when they finish; losers finish when they’re tired.” I imagine that is the kind of slogan coaches use with elite stars, though I wouldn’t try it on the young people I coach – they’d find it too off-putting. I like the idea of using sound in art, and the changing room is a really interesting place for an artist to explore – but I think Schaefer could have done much more. I’d have liked to see the show installed in a real changing room: there’d have been more of an atmosphere. He could have compared the way a changing room feels when a team has just won a match, with how it feels when they’ve just lost. Or he could have recorded all the sounds you’d hear over one whole day. Changing rooms are all about the people, the smells, and the banter – all of which are

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Buffett ‘heir’ misled board – report

David Sokol stepped down from board of Berkshire Hathaway after disclosure of controversial share deal Warren Buffett’s former heir apparent misled the investment guru’s senior management and violated company policies, according to a report from the audit committee of the board of Berkshire Hathaway. David Sokol, once seen as the executive most likely to succeed Buffett, stepped down last month after the disclosure of a controversial share deal involving chemicals firm Lubrizol. Sokol bought shares in the firm shortly before recommending that Berkshire acquire the company outright. Buffett originally said that neither Sokol nor he felt that “his Lubrizol purchases were in any way unlawful” and that they were not a factor in Sokol’s decision to resign. “I don’t believe I did anything wrong,” Sokol told CNBC. “I made an investment that I believed in. If I didn’t believe in the company, I wouldn’t have invested in it.” After an internal investigation, Berkshire said Sokol could face legal action from the board. The report examined Sokol’s disclosures to the Berkshire chairman, who is the world’s most famous investor. Buffett said in March that Sokol bought $10m of Lubrizol shares about a week before he suggested it as a potential takeover target for Berkshire. The value of Sokol’s shares rose by about $3m when Berkshire bought the firm. Sokol met investment bankers representing Lubrizol before his share purchase and told them that Berkshire was interested in a takeover. After the deal was done, a Citigroup banker phoned Buffett to congratulate him on the deal. “This was the first time Mr Buffett heard that investment bankers played any role in introducing Lubrizol to Mr Sokol, and did not square with Mr Sokol’s remark in January that he had come to know Lubrizol by owning the stock,” the report said. The report concludes: “His misleadingly incomplete disclosures to Berkshire Hathaway senior management concerning those purchases violated the duty of candor he owed the company.” Sokol’s remarks “did not satisfy the duty of full disclosure inherent in the Berkshire Hathaway policies and mandated by state law,” the report added. “His remark to Mr Buffett in January, revealing only that he owned some Lubrizol stock, did not tell Mr Buffett what he needed to know … [I]ts effect was to mislead: it implied that Mr Sokol owned the stock before he began considering Lubrizol as an acquisition candidate, when the truth was the reverse.” The internal report follows the threat of legal action from Berkshire shareholders. Last week, shareholder Mason Kirby filed the lawsuit in Delaware seeking to recover any allegedly improper gains that Sokol made on the Lubrizol shares. “Sokol’s trades and Buffett’s failure to fully inform himself about these trades are in direct violation of the company’s policy and amount to a breach of the duty of loyalty and due care owed to Berkshire and its shareholders,” the lawsuit said. Sokol had been viewed as a top contender to take over from Buffett, 80. Sokol has said that the disclosure of the purchases of Lubrizol shares and his resignation were unrelated. He has also said that he was not a decision maker on the Lubrizol purchase and did nothing wrong. The report comes ahead of Berkshire Hathaway’s annual genneral meeting in Omaha, Nebraska, where Buffett is expected to face more questions about the affair. Warren Buffett Banking United States Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

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My best shot: Philippe Vermès

‘This poster was the one everyone wanted in May 1968. It’s saying: “We, the workers, are the power now.”‘ This shot was taken at the Atelier Populaire – the popular workshop – which occupied the Ecole des

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My best shot: Philippe Vermès

‘This poster was the one everyone wanted in May 1968. It’s saying: “We, the workers, are the power now.”‘ This shot was taken at the Atelier Populaire – the popular workshop – which occupied the Ecole des

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Birth

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Birth

Mr.President We Have A Serious Disconnect!.mp4 Sony confirms that personal information was stolen President Obama on His Birth Certificate & the Real Issues Facing America Trump Questions Obama Birth Certificate | TMZ.com Donald Trump is already taking the credit for getting Barack Obama to go public with his birth certificate … saying, “I’m very proud of myself” … but… Breaking: Obama to Give Public Birth Certificate Announcement This … Breaking: Obama to Give Public Birth Certificate Announcement This AM. Posted by Jim Hoft on Wednesday, April 27, 2011, 8:05 AM. ALERT ALL BIRTHERS: President to Make Birth Certificate Announcement in 45 minutes. … Joe. My. God.: Obama Releases Birth Certificate, Birthers Leap Out … Some of the cases challenging Obama have explained that he was a dual citizen through his father at his birth , and they contend the framers of the Constitution excluded dual citizens from qualifying as natural born citizens. … President Obama Releases Long Form Birth Certificate | TPMDC Hoping to end a long-running “controversy” over whether he was born in the United States, the White House released President Barack Obama’s long-form birth certificate on Wednesday…. White House Releases Obama's Long-form Birth Certificate – Big … The White House released the long form of President Barack Obama’s birth certificate Wednesday in response to questions about whether he was really born in the U.S.. The certificate says Obama was born in Hawaii, which makes him … heyytori says: RT @BrookeAlvarez : Glad Obama has released his long form birth certificate. Now the media can finally focus on the important stories, like the royal wedding.

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Chaskielberg wins L’Iris D’Or award

Argentinian wins for portfolio of images taken when living with islanders living in the Paraná river delta over two years An Argentinian photographer who began his career on local papers last night picked up one of his art form’s leading awards for a portfolio of pictures he took while living with islanders in the Paraná river delta, Argentina. Alejandro Chaskielberg’s dramatically luminous images of a community going about their daily lives won him photographer of the year – known as L’Iris D’Or – at the Sony World Photography Awards, presented last night at a gala ceremony at the Odeon Leicester Square in London. Chaskielberg, 34, spent two years with the islanders, immersing himself in their daily lives and taking photographs of precisely staged scenes at night. The chairman of this year’s judges, critic Francis Hodgson, said of Chaskielberg’s High Tide series: “These carefully directed pictures tell solid truths – about toil and community and marginal survival – in a splendidly allusive way.” Buenos Aires-born Chaskielberg, who took his first job on a local newspaper aged 18, said of the project: “Using photography, I have been able to present another version of the Paraná river delta and its community that has been photographically ignored throughout the years.” The photographer wins $25,000, new camera equipment, and of course considerable acclaim, joining previous Iris d’Or winners David Zimmerman, Vanessa Winship and Tommaso Ausili as a member of the World Photography Academy. He beat considerable competition, with 105,000 images entered from 162 countries. Other winners at the ceremony, which was held in London for the first time – it has previously been held in Cannes – included a Hong Kong jewellery manufacturer who taught himself basic photography skills using books and the internet. Chan Kwok Hung was named overall winner in the amateur categories, picking up $5,000 as Open Photographer of the year for his dramatic picture Buffalo Race, which he took in Indonesia. There were 13 more winners named in various professional categories covering everything from sport to travel to conceptual. Briton Adam Hinton won the campaign section of the commercial awards for his photographs for Saatchi & Saatchi and Spaniard Javier Arcenillas, shortlisted in four categories, won in two – current affairs and contemporary issues. The truly big name at last night’s awards was American photographer Bruce Davidson, 77, who received the outstanding contribution to photography award. He arrived ahead of two shows of his work in London – a selling exhibition at Chris Beetles gallery opening next week and a retrospective being shown as part of the World Photography Festival at Somerset House. Photography book awards were also given out as part of the proceedings with the best photography book going to a special volume of David Goldblatt’s TJ – images of Johannesburg shot over 40 years – which had married with Ivan Vladislavic’s novel Double Negative. Matthew Solomon’s book Disappearing Tricks, on early theatrical magic and silent film, won the best moving image book award and German publisher Gerhard Steidl was given an outstanding contribution award. Photography Awards and prizes Mark Brown guardian.co.uk

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