Technology
giant Apple won an international award on Wednesday for making details of its
supply chains public in a bid to boost transparency and help end modern
slavery.
Labour
rights groups had previously criticised Apple and its biggest manufacturing
partner Foxconn for excessive overtime, hiring underage workers and failing to
provide health insurance.
"One
of the deepest commitments that Apple has a company is to leave the world
better than we found it," Angela Ahrendts, head of retail at Apple, said
during Trust Conference in London, which is hosted by the Thomson Reuters
Foundation.
"As
a company whose work touches the lives of so many people, we feel we have an
enormous responsibility, and an enormous opportunity, to turn our values into
action," she said, receiving the prize designed by British sculptor Anish
Kapoor.
The
Thomson Reuters Foundation Stop Slavery Award recognises efforts by companies
to identify, investigate and eradicate forced labour from their supply chains.
Consumer
goods giant Unilever was the other winner of the annual award, while financial
services firm Standard Chartered and Thailand-based seafood producer Thai Union
were highly commended for their work.
More
than 40 million people are estimated to be trapped as slaves in forced labour
and forced marriages, most of them women and girls, according to the
International Labour Organization (ILO) and rights group Walk Free Foundation.
Nearly
25 million work in factories, on construction sites, farms, fishing boats and
as domestic or sex workers, says ILO.
With
slavery now considered a major global issue, there is growing scrutiny on
initiatives to meet a U.N. goal to end by 2030 a trade estimated to raise
annual illicit gains of $150 billion for traffickers.
Businesses
are under increased pressure from both governments and consumers to disclose what
actions they are taking to ensure their supply chains are free from slavery.
The
world's largest canned tuna company, Thai Union Group PCL, has also pledged to
tackle potential labour abuse and overfishing, seeking to clean up the Thai
seafood industry.
Thailand's
multibillion-dollar seafood sector has come under fire in recent years after
investigations showed widespread slavery, trafficking and violence on fishing
boats and in onshore food processing factories.
The
company said in 2016 it would eliminate recruitment fees for its workers to
prevent labourers from racking up debts to job brokers and from being exploited
and abused.
The
Stop Slavery Award was won last year by sports giant German sportswear giant
Adidas, global fashion retailer C&A, U.S. technology company Intel, and
British retail and services group The Co-operative Group.
(Reporting
by Lin Taylor @linnytayls, Editing by Claire Cozens; Please credit the Thomson
Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters that covers
humanitarian issues, conflicts, land and property rights, modern slavery and
human trafficking, gender equality, climate change and resilience.
Source: news.trust
No comments:
Post a Comment