General Press Releases
Brown slated on ‘cynical’ poverty event
‘Business allies given free ride on rights abuse’
British prime minister Gordon Brown today faces heavy criticism for launching his Business Call to Action on global poverty with corporations that have been widely attacked for deepening poverty and undermining human rights.
The attack comes from the charity War on Want as Mr Brown and the United Nations Development Programme host a meeting with business leaders to showcase private sector initiatives.
The companies behind the Call to Action on the UN’s anti-poverty Millennium Development Goals include several that War on Want has condemned in its reports on poverty and labour rights abuses in Africa, Asia and Latin America:
CONTACT: Paul Collins, War on Want media officer (+44) (0)20 7549 0584 or (+44) (0)7983 550728 NOTES TO EDITORS:
- UK mining giant Anglo American, one of the first to sign up to the call, has been criticised for profiting from violence against poor communities in countries such as Colombia, South Africa and the Philippines.
- Wal-Mart has achieved global notoriety for its record on labour rights and opposition to trade unions. In a recent report War on Want revealed that workers in Bangladesh making clothes for Wal-Mart subsidiary Asda are paid just five pence an hour for toiling 80 hours a week, well short of a living wage.
- Coca-Cola, which signed up in support of Brown’s call at this year’s World Economic Forum in Davos, has been the target of action in countries such as India and El Salvador for taking communal water resources from poor farmers and for its pollution of agricultural land.
- Bechtel has been widely attacked over the failed privatisation of water in the Bolivian town of Cochabamba and its subsequent attempts to sue Latin America’s poorest country for millions of dollars.
CONTACT: Paul Collins, War on Want media officer (+44) (0)20 7549 0584 or (+44) (0)7983 550728 NOTES TO EDITORS:
- John Hilary is available for interview over the Bank Holiday period as well as on 6 May.
- War on Want’s report on Anglo American can be downloaded at www.waronwant.org/angloamerican
- Its film on Anglo American profiting from human rights abuses in Colombia may be seen at the same link.
The charity’s report on Asda Wal-Mart clothes sweatshops in Bangladesh can be read at www.waronwant.org/fashionvictims - Its report on Coca-Cola is available at
www.waronwant.org/cocacola - The Millennium Development Goals were set as targets for 2015 at the UN Millennium Summit in 2000; see www.un.org/millenniumgoals/ for further details.


