Help stop cotton-picking slavery in Uzbekistan

Slavery is alive and well in the cotton industry in Uzbekistan, and H&M has the power to end it.

Tell H&M to take all steps necessary to dump slave-grown cotton from its supply chain.

Send a Message

Every year, more than a million men, women, and children in Uzbekistan are forced by their government to work in the state-run industry harvesting cotton. Activists who speak out are tortured and detained.

And how does the government of Uzbekistan continue to get away with these crimes? Cotton purchasing companies like Daewoo International buy up Uzbek slave-grown cotton and sell it -- sometimes using layers of middlemen to further separate brands -- to multinational clothing retailers that are willing to turn a blind eye to the source of their cotton. That means retailers like H&M, the world's second largest clothing retailer, have tremendous power to stop this modern day slavery, by refusing to buy cotton from Daewoo.

H&M made a public pledge not to buy Uzbeki cotton, but continued to purchase from Daewoo, which operates several cotton plants in Uzbekistan and thus directly profits off slavery in Uzbekistan. Since this controversy came to light, H&M has cut ties with Daewoo, but it's clear that without major changes to its supply chain monitoring system, H&M could "accidentally" purchase tainted cotton again.

As H&M's customers and potential customers, it's up to us to show H&M it needs to be a global leader in stopping modern-day slavery by reforming its monitoring systems so it can guarantee that none of its suppliers are profiting from slavery. 

Click here to tell H&M to stop doing business with companies that profit from modern-day slavery.

The global economy is full of human rights violations, but the Uzbek cotton industry is unique. The industry is run by the country's authoritarian regime, and local authorities have to force people to work to meet production quotas. Schools are often closed during plantings and harvests so children can be forced into the fields. None of the profits are returned to farmers or local communities.

There aren’t many corporations that are willing to do business with Uzbekistan, but the Korean conglomerate Daewoo International runs three large cotton processing facilities there. Daewoo processes cotton all over the world and sells clothing to apparel companies, and it’s difficult to know which Daewoo products are slave-grown and which aren’t. So human rights activists have called on companies to boycott Daewoo entirely. And since the global apparel industry is a maze of subcontracting, that boycott will only be effective if brands like H&M also prevent their suppliers from doing business with Daewoo.

If we can get H&M to ensure that slave-grown cotton is permanently out of its supply chain, the impact could ripple across the entire retail industry. Daewoo -- which buys from Uzbekistan because it thinks it's immune to public pressure --  will see that another one of its former customers is putting up walls to prevent any slave-grown cotton from getting into its supply chain. We've heard rumors that Daewoo is spooked by the attention it's getting and is considering making dramatic policy changes, so H&M's actions could come at just the right moment to push Daewoo out of the slave-grown cotton industry for good.

H&M promised not to purchase any cotton from companies profiting from slavery, but until the Cotton Campaign broke the story last month, the corporation was purchasing from a Daewoo-owned factory. If H&M expects its customers to take its promises seriously, it needs to institute stricter rules ensuring that it doesn't do any business with companies that are profiting from slavery.

Sign our petition to H&M demanding that it take all steps necessary to fight slavery in Uzbekistan.

Thanks

Kaytee, Rob and the team at SumOfUs.org

 

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Further reading:

The Cotton Campaign:Stop forced and child labor in the cotton Industry of Uzbekistan

 

SumOfUs is a world-wide movement of people like you, working together to hold corporations accountable for their actions and forge a new, sustainable path for our global economy. You can follow us on Twitter, and like us on Facebook.

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(Information on H&M sourced on Wikipedia)

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H & M Hennes & Mauritz AB (operating as H&M) is a Swedish multinational retail-clothing company, known for its fast-fashion clothing for men, women, teenagers and children.

H&M exists in 43 countries and as of 2011 employed around 94,000 people.[2] It had 2,325 stores at end of 2011 and 2,629 stores at end of August 2012.[3] It is ranked the second largest global clothing retailer, just behind Spain-based Inditex (parent company of ZARA), and leads over third largest global clothing retailer, United States based GAP Inc.

The design team in the company’s Sweden office controls the steps of production, from merchandise planning to establishing specifications, and production is outsourced to approximately 800 factories in Europe and Asia. These facilities are used for horizontal division of labor, rather than being integrated.