Evidence of The Coca Cola Company`s Human Rights Abuses and
Transcription
Evidence of The Coca Cola Company`s Human Rights Abuses and
Information Packet: Evidence of The Coca Cola Company’s Human Rights Abuses and Environmental Violations brought to you by: Saint Joseph’s University Students for Workers’ Rights sju_swr@hotmail.com Table of Contents 1. SJU Students For Workers’ Rights Resolution …………………..………. ..……page 4 2. Overview of Coca Cola Injustices & Campaign Demands: ....................... ..……page 7 by United Students Against Sweatshops 3. Corporate Profile on The Coca Cola Company: by The Polaris Institute ….. • The Polaris Institute is a watchdog agency based in Canada that investigates corporations and keeps track of the global economy regarding social justice, human rights, and environmental issues. • The full 61-page document can be found at the following website: (http://www.polarisinstitute.org/corp_profiles/public_service_gats_pdfs/coca-colapdf.pdf) Enclosed is Section 4, the Social Profile [pgs. 32-45]. It highlights human rights violations in Colombia, global environmental abuses, & labor violations in the US and globally. …….page 12 4. New York City Fact-Finding Delegation on Coca-Cola in Colombia…… ……page 27 5. Letter from Terry Collingsworth to Ed Potter ……………………………. • Terry Collingsworth, attorney from International Labor Rights Fund representing ……page 39 6. How credible is Coca Cola? ………………………………………………... ……page 41 • In January 2004, New York City Council Member Hiram Monserrate and a delegation of union, student and community activists traveled to Colombia to investigate allegations by Coca-Cola workers that the company is complicit in the human rights abuses the workers have suffered. The delegation met with Coke officials and workers, as well as a variety of governmental, human rights and clergy representatives. Colombian Coca Cola plant workers in their law suit against the company, wrote this letter to Ed Potter, Director of Global Labor Relations for Coca Cola, after a meeting they had in November 2005. by Ray Rogers, Director of Campaign to Stop Killer Coke • Overview of Coca Cola’s various injustices, particularly in the United States, including racial discrimination, aggressive marketing towards children, and factory safety issues. 7. Expose of Cal-Safety- by United Students Against Sweatshops ……….……... ……page 48 8. Press Release Concerning ILO Investigation- from Killercoke.org …………. ……page 52 • In the spring of 2005, Coca Cola stated that Cal-Safety conducted an independent investigation of their labor practices in Colombia. This article reviews several reasons why Cal-Safety is not a credible source and their involvement in major cover-ups in the past. • This article reviews the many reasons why the second ‘independent investigation’ proposed by Coca Cola is neither independent nor an investigation at all. 9. Denials and Truths- by United Students Against Sweatshops ……………….... ……page 57 10. “Hofstra Faculty Passes Resolution to End Coke Monopoly”- article …… ……page 60 11. “WHO Objects to Reference in Coca-Cola Campaigns”- article …………. ……page 63 Alternatives: 12. Responsible Shopper Corporate Profile: Cadbury Schweppes .................. ……page 64 • Responsible Shopper alerts the public about the social and environmental impact of major corporations, and provides opportunities for consumers and investors to vote with their dollars for change. • This report outlines the criticisms against Cadbury Schweppes. It is 2 pages. 13. Responsible Shopper Corporate Profile: Coca Cola ……………............... • This report outlines the criticisms against Coca Cola. It is 9 pages. ……page 66 14. Other Schools Involved In the Campaign- from Killercoke.org ………….... ……page 75 15. Additional Resources ………………………………………………………. ……page 78 • Many schools that have cut contracts with Coca Cola have moved to Pepsi Cola. Corporate reports, however, have shown that Pepsi is just as ethically horrendous as Coca Cola (for full report please see: http://www.coopamerica.org/programs/rs/profile.cfm?id=276). • Other schools now use local bottlers, which is a viable option. • Students for Workers’ Rights endorses Cadbury Schweppes as a beverage provider, given their reputable social responsibility record, variety of popular, brand name beverages and snack foods, and commitment to human rights and environmentally sound practices. o Their full Corporate and Social Responsibility Report for 2006 is available in PDF form from: http://www.cadburyschweppes.com/ 4 5 6 7 Unthinkable! Undrinkable! A Campus Campaign Overview The materials in this packet are designed to help student activists launch campaigns demanding that Coca-Cola stop its abusive treatment of workers and communities in the global economy. Why Target Coca-Cola? Coca-Cola is one of the world’s most powerful and profitable corporations. In 2004, CocaCola earned $4.85 billion in profits. Yet, despite repeated pleas for help, Coca-Cola has not found the time or resources to insure the most basic safety of the workers who bottle its products or prevent massive environmental devastation in the communities where it does business. Coca-Cola has responded by launching public relations campaigns and denying responsibility- it’s time we show them that they need to actually change things on the ground- enough is enough! Death Squads in Colombia Colombia has long been the most dangerous country in the world to organize a union. Since 1986, roughly 4000 Colombian trade unionists have been murdered. In 2000, three of every five trade unionists killed in the world were Colombian. The vast majority of these murders have been carried out by right-wing paramilitary groups (aka death squads) on an ideological mission to destroy the labor movement. These groups often work in collaboration with the official U.S.supported Colombian military, and in some instances with managers at plants producing for multinational corporations. In the case of Coca-Cola, according to numerous credible reports, the company and its business partners have turned a blind eye to, financially supported, and actively colluded with paramilitary groups in efforts to destroy workers’ attempts to organize unions and bargain collectively. ♦ Since 1989, eight union leaders from Coca-Cola plants have been murdered by paramilitary forces. Dozens of other workers have been intimidated, kidnapped, or tortured. ♦ In Carepa, members of the paramilitary murdered union leader Isidro Gil in broad daylight inside his factory’s gates. They returned the next day and forced all of the plant’s workers to resign from their union by signing documents on Coca-Cola letterhead. ♦ The most recent murder attempt occurred on August 22, 2003, when two men riding motorcycles fired shots at Juan Carlos Galvis, a worker leader at Coca-Cola’s Barrancabermeja plant. ♦ There is substantial evidence that managers of several bottling plants have ordered assaults to occur and made regular payments to leaders of the paramilitary groups carrying out the attacks. These ongoing abuses have taken their toll on Coca-Cola workers’ efforts to organize. Their union, SINALTRAINAL, has suffered a dramatic loss in membership, as worker leaders are intimidated or forced into hiding. SINALTRAINAL has appealed for solidarity and allies in the U.S. labor and social justice movements have answered their call. The United Steelworkers and the International Labor Rights Fund have filed a lawsuit against Coca-Cola on behalf of the union and victims’ families in U.S. federal court. Other unions including the Teamsters and many community groups have launched public campaigns targeting Coke. What are workers in Colombia demanding? ♦ Acknowledge Underlying Facts. The events alleged in the four Complaints filed in federal district court in Miami, Florida are objectively verifiable. For example, Mr. Isidro Gil was murdered in the Coca-Cola bottling plant in Carepa. The Plaintiffs are extremely 8 distraught that Coca-Cola's public statements have labeled these allegations as "false" since this constitutes an effort to alter the historical record. ♦ Public Statements Denouncing Anti-Union Violence. Coca-Cola and Panamco/FEMSA should issue strong, public statements throughout the press in Colombia and in the world denouncing violence, and particularly anti-union violence, by all armed actors in Colombia. The companies should state that such violence, regardless of who commits it, is seen by corporations such as themselves as being bad for business and investment. Specifically, they should publicly state that if the paramilitaries see themselves as protecting the interests of domestic and foreign investment, they are wrong; that their violent conduct, especially against trade unionists, is bad for business and investment and must cease. Coca-Cola and Panamco/FEMSA must also make public statements in the press indicating their belief that, contrary to the statements made by local Colombian management, Sinaltrainal is not connected with any armed groups in Colombia, and acknowledge that the violent acts described in the four federal complaints was unlawful. ♦ Human Rights Committee. Coca-Cola and Panamco/FEMSA must agree to support the creation of an independent committee to which workers can submit complaints about anti-union violence and intimidation at or around any Coca-Cola bottling plant. The Committee will work with such employees and the union to address such concerns in a productive way. ♦ Investigation and Training: Coca-Cola and Panamco/FEMSA must encourage the proper authorities in Colombia to investigate links between local Colombian management and the armed groups, particularly the paramilitaries. Further, the companies must conduct their own internal investigations and remove management with such links. This investigation must be subject to independent review. Coca-Cola and Panamco/FEMSA should also conduct training with all management personnel and employees in which they strongly stress that any collusion with armed actors or any encouragement of anti-union violence by these actors, whether material or moral, will not be tolerated and will result in immediate discharge. ♦ Address Anti-Union Impact of Violence. As a consequence of the anti-union violence that is the subject of the four legal cases, SINALTRAINAL has suffered significant losses of members and other institutional damage. In order to address this distinct aspect of the violence, Coca-Cola must agree to require its bottlers to negotiate with SINALTRAINAL and to agree to a process to repair the damage suffered by SINALTRAINAL. This shall include prohibiting any of the Coca-Cola bottlers from referring to the union in a derogatory way, such as calling it a "guerilla union," reinstating union members who fled following specific death threats from paramilitaries or who were discharged unlawfully for their union activity, and allowing SINALTRAINAL to have access to workers prior to elections in any of the subject bottling plants where SINALTRAINAL was decertified following the acts of violence due to lost membership from terror and intimidation. ♦ Cessation of Criminal Charges. Coca-Cola and Panamco/FEMSA must stop pressing criminal legal action against the Plaintiffs as they have done since shortly after, and in retaliation for, the Plaintiffs' commencement of the civil human rights lawsuit in Miami. ♦ Compensation for Victims Environmental Devastation in India (selections from indiaresource.org) 9 Communities across India are under assault from Coca-Cola practices in the country. A pattern has emerged as a result of Coca-Cola's bottling operations in India. ♦ Communities across India living around Coca-Cola's bottling plants are experiencing severe water shortages, directly as a result of Coca-Cola's massive extraction of water from the common groundwater resource. The wells have run dry and the hand water pumps do not work any more. Studies, including one by the Central Ground Water Board in India, have confirmed the significant depletion of the water table. ♦ When the water is extracted from the common groundwater resource by digging deeper, the water smells and tastes strange. Coca-Cola has been indiscriminately discharging its waste water into the fields around its plant and sometimes into rivers, including the Ganges, in the area. The result has been that the groundwater has been polluted as well as the soil. Public health authorities have posted signs around wells and hand pumps advising the community that the water is unfit for human consumption. ♦ In two communities, Plachimada and Mehdiganj, Coca-Cola was distributing its solid waste to farmers in the area as "fertilizer". Tests conducted by the BBC found cadmium and lead in the waste, effectively making the waste toxic waste. Coca-Cola stopped the practice of distributing its toxic waste only when ordered to do so by the state government. ♦ Tests conducted by a variety of agencies, including the government of India, confirmed that Coca-Cola products contained high levels of pesticides, and as a result, the Parliament of India has banned the sale of Coca-Cola in its cafeteria. However, CocaCola not only continues to sell drinks laced with poisons in India (that could never be sold in the US and EU), it is also introducing new products in the Indian market. And as if selling drinks with DDT and other pesticides to Indians was not enough, one of CocaCola's latest bottling facilities to open in India, in Ballia, is located in an area with a severe contamination of arsenic in its groundwater. Destroying Lives, Livelihoods and Communities Water shortages, pollution of groundwater and soil, exposure to toxic waste and pesticides is having impacts of massive proportions in India. In a country where over 70% of the population makes a living related to agriculture, stealing the water and poisoning the water and soil is a sure recipe for disaster. Thousands of farmers in India have been affected by Coca-Cola's practices, and Coca-Cola is guilty of destroying the livelihoods of thousands of people in India. Unfortunately, we do not even know the extent of the damage as a result from exposure to the toxic waste and pesticides as these are long term problems. Most affected are the marginalized communities such as the Adivasis (Indigenous People's) and Dalits (formerly untouchables), as well as the low-income communities, landless agricultural workers and women. Taken in its entirety, that's a lot of people in India. The Struggles The arrogance of Coca-Cola in India is not going unanswered. In fact, the growing opposition to Coca-Cola- primarily from Coca-Cola affected communities- has spread so rapidly and gained so much strength that Coca-Cola is now on the defensive. Kala Dera, Rajasthan In the state of Rajasthan, the High Court ruled in November 2004 that all soft drinks in the state must state the level of pesticides on the product label, in addition to the ingredients. This 10 unprecedented ruling came only three weeks after a 2,000 strong demonstration to shut down the Coca-Cola bottling plant in Kala Dera, on the outskirts of Jaipur in Rajasthan. Over 50 villages are experiencing water shortages as a result of Coca-Cola's indiscriminate mining of water, and "struggle committees" have been formed in at least 32 villages to confront Coca-Cola's abuses. The Central Ground Water Board, a government agency, not only confirmed the declining water table as a result of Coca-Cola's indiscriminate mining of the water, it also faulted Coca-Cola for creating "ecological imbalances" in the area. In response to the court order to state the level of pesticides on their labels, Coca-Cola appealed the decision on the grounds that such an action would force them to compromise with their "commercial confidentiality"! Coca-Cola also submitted to the court that small traces of DDT and other pesticides are not harmful "to the health of the consumers." The court rejected the appeal, and significantly, stated that "commercial interests are subservient to fundamental rights." Plachimada, Kerala The single largest Coca-Cola bottling plant in India, in Plachimada, Kerala, remains shut down since March 2004. Initially ordered to shut down until June 15 (for arrival of monsoon rains) by the state government to ease drought conditions, the Plachimada bottling plant has been unable to open because the local village council (panchayat) is REFUSING to reissue Coca-Cola a license to operate. The village council has maintained that the plant needs to shut down because it has destroyed the water system in the area as well as polluted the area. The panchayat is an elected body at the most local level in India, and forms the building block of democracy in India - Panchayat Raj- a model promoted extensively by Mahatma Gandhi. CocaCola, in typical fashion, has chosen to undermine democracy by appealing to the courts that the panchayat has no jurisdiction over the plant and Coca-Cola, and that it should be the state of Kerala that makes the decision. Coca-Cola's efforts to undermine local governance is being followed closely as the court ruling in favor of the panchayat could set a significant precedence for local governance. The struggle in Plachimada is the oldest struggle against Coca-Cola in India and there has been a 24/7 vigil directly in front of the factory gates since April 22, 2002. The struggle in Plachimada has also enjoyed significant victories. In December 2003, the High court, in an extremely significant decision, ruled that Coca-Cola HAD to seek alternative sources of water and that it could extract only as much water from the common groundwater resource as a farmer owning 34 acres of land could. The justification being that the plant is located on 34 acres. Furthermore, the court held that the groundwater belonged to the people and the Government had no right to allow a private party to extract such a huge quantity of ground water which was "a property held by it in trust''. In another significant action in August, 2004, the Kerala State Pollution Control Board (PCB), acting upon a Supreme court order, directed the Coca-Cola company to ensure that water supply through pipeline is delivered to the houses of all the affected communities in the vicinity. While the various court and government agencies are validating and acting upon the community concerns, Coca-Cola is busy putting more money into a public relations strategy designed to convince everyone that they have nothing to do with the water scarcity and pollution in Plachimada and in India. Mehdiganj, Uttar Pradesh 11 More so than other struggles against Coca-Cola in India, the communities in Mehdiganj, a village about 20 kms from the holy city of Varanasi, have more of an uphill battle because the local and state officials are turning a blind eye to the concerns of the communities. The water table has declined between 25-40 feet in the last four years, and Coca-Cola has been discharging its waste water into the surrounding fields, and now into a canal that feeds into the river Ganges, a holy river for millions of Indian. The landscape is very rural, and farming is the main source of livelihood in the area. Many farmers have yet to be compensated for the land that was taken from them in order to build the Coca-Cola bottling facility. The movement to shut down the Coca-Cola plant has been growing rapidly for the last year. In August 2003, community members entered the office of the Regional Pollution Control Board in Varanasi, and to protest their inaction, dumped sacks full of sludge from the Coca-Cola plant on the table of the regional officer. In September 2003, over 500 people marched to the Coca-Cola factory gates and were physically attacked and beaten by police and private security guards. In October 2003, a march was organized from the Coke plant in Mehdiganj to a Pepsi plant in Jaunpur, about 150 km away. And in mid-December 2003, ten activists went on a five-day hunger strike in front of the plant. They were supported by fifty people sitting with them each day, and about 300 people went on hunger strikes of varied duration. And in June 2004, hundreds conducted a sit-in in front of the state assembly in Lucknow. So far, not only have the authorities not cooperated at all, they have consistently refused to make good on their promises of inquiries and investigations to look into Coca-Cola's practices that are depleting the groundwater and polluting the water and soil. In addition, the authorities have trumped up criminal charges against some of the key leaders of the struggle, and issued orders to these leaders preventing them from "shouting slogans or making inflammatory speeches … within 300 meters of the plant". The communities are determined to close down the factory in Mehdiganj, and the local organizers have been extremely successful in garnering local support in the area. They have also organized the community around a new Coca-Cola plant in Balia, about 250 kms away. From November 15-24, 2004, a march will be conducted from the Coca-Cola factory gates in Balia to the Coca-Cola factory gates in Mehdiganj, demanding the closure of both the facilities. What are communities in India demanding? The first step that Coca-Cola must take is to admit to the severity of problems it has caused in India, and then find ways to address them operationally: ♦ They must permanently shut down the bottling facilities in Mehdiganj, Kala Dera and Plachimada. ♦ They must compensate the affected community members. ♦ They must recharge the depleted groundwater ♦ They must clean up the contaminated water and soil. ♦ They must ensure that workers laid off as a result of Coca-Cola's negligence are retrained and relocated in a more sustainable industry. ♦ They must admit liability for the long term consequences of exposure to toxic waste and pesticide laden drinks in India. What Can Students Do? corporate Profile profile 12 Inside the Real T hing: A Pr ofile of the Softdr ink Giant T he Coca-Cola Company profile Oct ober 2 0 0 5 P r epar ed by R ich ar d Gir ar d P ol ar i s I n s t i t u t e R es ear ch er corporate 13 4. Social Profile This section profiles three cases that demonstrate what Coke is capable of doing to protect its bottom line. Coke’s complicity with the actions of right-wing paramilitary groups in Colombia along with massive ground water takings in India and their landmark racial discrimination settlement in the United States challenge the notion that this corporation practices a high standard of corporate social responsibility. Below are three specific cases followed by sections exposing Coke’s labour and environmental track record. 4.1 Colombia: “Our human rights as workers are systematically violated, with assassinations, disappearances, targeting, torture, exile, terrorism, mass sackings, and death threats as part of a 175 bloody policy to eliminate the union and rob the workers’ rights.” SINALTRAINAL statement, th 18 May 2005 Coke has extensive bottling operations in Latin America. The Latin American market has long been lucrative for the corporation who has bottling agreements with over 20 bottlers throughout Mexico and South and Central America. Ten percent of Coke’s $21.96 billion 2004 revenue was generated from sales in Latin America (excluding Puerto Rico), while over 25 percent of their unit case volume is consumed in the region. The Latin American country pages on Coke’s website outline the locations of each bottling company Coke uses in region with one exception: Colombia. The Colombia page states only that Coke has “bottler agreements with independent companies that own and operate bottling plants that manufacture and distribute Coca-Cola products”, while the other country sites disclose the number and names of the bottling companies used by Coke to 176 manufacture their products. That Coke would be reluctant to disclose who they have bottling agreements with in Colombia but not in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, Mexico, Peru and Venezuela may be related to the corporate links with its bottlers’ associations and paramilitary groups in Colombia. The US based Stop Killer Coke campaign group cites that since 1989, seven union leaders and one friendly plant manager employed at Coca-Cola bottling operations have been murdered by right wing paramilitary groups in Colombia. Hundreds of other Coke workers and their family members have been tortured, kidnapped and/or illegally detained by violent paramilitaries, often 177 working closely with plant managements. As of July 2005, the situation for Coke workers and their family members remains dangerous. Union organizers at Coca-Cola bottling plants are not alone in a country where hundreds of union leaders have been assassinated over the last decade by right wing paramilitary groups, widely 178 known to be linked to the army and the Colombian government. What makes the plight of Coke workers stand out is that one of the world’s largest corporations is complicit in this inhumane treatment. For Coke the repression of organized labour helps cut production costs by dismissing thousands of workers and minimizing salaries while increasing production and profits. Regarding the attitude of the corporation towards the actions of paramilitaries at Coke’s bottling facilities in Colombia, United Steelworkers of America (USWA) lawyer, Dan Kovalik said that “if any of these plants make a mistake in applying Coca-Cola’s formula or in delivering Coke, they would be there 179 to correct it, but in cases where they kill union leaders, they do nothing”. 175 “The anti-coke manifesto”, Colombia Solidarity Campaign, 2005, http://www.polarisinstitute.org/polaris_project/water_lords/campaigns/anticokefinal1.pdf 176 Coca Cola website, http://www2.coca-cola.com/ourcompany/cfs/cfs_colombia.html 177 http://www.killercoke.org/crimes.htm 178 Human Rights Watch website, http://hrw.org/english/docs/2004/01/21/colomb6978.htm#3 179 Lobe, J., Coca-Cola to be Sued for Bottlers’ Abuses, Inter Press Service, July 20, 2001, http://www.commondreams.org/cgi-bin/print.cgi?file=/headlines01/0720-01.htm 32 14 Colombia’s National Union of Food Industry Workers (SINALTRAINAL), president Javier Correa says that “the paramilitaries have graffitied threats and accusations against us on the walls of bottling plants. These plants have become like concentration camps. The army patrols the buildings. There is so much repression that union workers are even followed into the toilet. One worker killed himself. In his suicide note he blamed Coca-Cola.” On the attitude of the corporation, Correa says that “Coca-Cola has turned from a time of exploitation to a time of slavery. Because the workers continue to resist this oppression the paramilitaries now try to kidnap family members, they’ve burnt union headquarters and destroyed whatever evidence they can so we are unable to bring a case against them. If SINALTRAINAL is dissolved," adds Correa 180 "we face assassinations". The links between Coke and actions of Colombia’s paramilitary groups can be traced to the corporation’s bottling agreements with companies in Colombia. As explained on page 1 of this report, Coke franchises its bottling operations to various bottling companies who purchase syrups and concentrates from the corporation, mix them with water, and package and sell the final product to retailers. While different Coca-Cola bottling operations in Colombia have been involved in violence towards union organizers, one case in Carepa during the mid-1990s showcases how closely Coke is associated to paramilitary action in the country. In July 2001, the Colombian labour union, SINALTRAINAL, along with the United Steel Workers Union and International Labor Rights Fund filed a lawsuit in a federal court in Miami against Coke and two of its bottlers, Bebidas y Alimentos and Panamerican Beverages, INC. The lawsuit charges that Coke and its associates are responsible for “the systematic intimidation, kidnapping, 181 detention and murder of trade unionists” working at Coca-Cola bottling plants in Colombia. The suit alleges that Coke’s Colombian bottlers maintained open relations with right wing paramilitary death squads as part of a strategy to intimidate union leaders. One portion of the case covers the 1996 murder of union organizer Isidro Segundo Gil who worked at the Coca-Cola bottling plant owned by Bebidas y Alimentos in Carepa Colombia. Violence and intimidation towards SINALTRAINAL members at the plant began in April 1994 when paramilitary forces murdered Bebidas workers, Jose Eleazar Manco David and Luis Enrique Gomez Granada. Paramilitary forces then began to intimidate other SINALTRAINAL members and threatened local union leadership with violence if they did not resign. Many members left the bottling plant and moved from Carepa due to the threats. Paramilitaries had full 182 permission to enter the plant to deliver the threats to the leadership. Very soon after the union elected a new executive, including Isidro Gil, to replace the one that had fled, Bebidas y Alimentos began to hire members of the paramilitaries who had threatened the first union board to work at the plant. In September 1995 Richard Kirby Keilland, the American owner of the bottler with his father Richard Kirby, hired Ariost Milan Mosquera to become the plant Manager. Ariost Milan Mosquera proceeded to illegally fire members of the SINALTRAINAL executive and threatened to destroy the union. He announced in public that he had given orders 183 to the paramilitaries to carry out the task and bragged that he would sweep away the union. From the beginning of 1996 until December of the same year, the paramilitaries stepped up their threats against union members and executives, forcing members to flee Carepa fearing for their lives. During the same time period the suit claims that SINALTRAINAL members witnessed 180 Williams, M., “Coca Cola Genocide”, Colombia Solidarity Campaign, http://www.colombiasolidarity.org.uk/Solidarity%209/cocacolagenocide.html 181 Complaint filed against The Coca Cola Company in the United States District Court Southern District of Florida, page 1, http://www.laborrights.org/projects/corporate/coke/index.html 182 ibid, page 18, http://www.laborrights.org/projects/corporate/coke/index.html 183 ibid, page 19, http://www.laborrights.org/projects/corporate/coke/index.html 33 15 Bebidas manager Ariost Milan Mosquera socializing with paramilitaries and providing them with coca-cola products for their social functions. SINALTRAINAL was meanwhile negotiating a new labour agreement at the plant which included proposals for increased security at the plant for threatened union members and a cessation of Ariost Milan Mosquera’s threats against the union and his collusion with paramilitaries. Richard Kirby Kielland was present at the negotiations and refused the unions requests. As a response to these events, SINALTRAINAL began a national campaign in August 1996, calling upon Bebidas, as well as Panamco Colombia and Coca-Cola Colombia to protect union leadership and members in Carepa. In November 1996, the union presented a labour contract to Bebidas which included a provision which would have required the bottler to provide security in the plant to protect workers from the paramilitaries. Ariost Milan Mosquera took the letter to Bogotá to discuss it with Richard Kirby Keilland. th On December 5 , 1996, two paramilitaries approached Isidro Gil, who was then involved in negotiations with the Bebidas, and shot him to death at the entrance to the Carepa plant. The same day paramilitaries approached other members of SINALTRAINAL’s board telling them that they had murdered Gil and would do the same to them if they did not leave Carepa. They also said that they would hold a meeting the next day at the plant with all members of the union to tell them that they would have to resign from the union or face death. That night the paramilitaries went to the SINALTRAINAL office in Carepa and burned it down. The paramilitaries held their meeting as planned on December 7 where they explained to the workers that they had 3 options: 1 resign from the union; 2 leave Carepa; 3 be killed. The workers were then directed to the manager’s office where they signed resignation papers prepared by Bebidas y Alimentos. As a result of the threats, workers resigned en masse from the union thus destroying the SINALTRAINAL local in Carepa. The lawsuit says that after Gil’s murder and the forced resignation of union members at the plant, Bebidas y Alimentos paid the paramilitaries for 184 their efforts. On December 26 the paramilitaries killed another Bebidas worker and then later in 2000 the wife of Isidro Gil. In 1997 Richard Kirby and Richard Kirby Keilland asked Coke if they could sell the Bebidas y Alimentos along with the Carepa plant. Coke denied the request and they continue to own the 185 Carepa plant. At Panamco’s plant in Bucaramanga, the lawsuit claims that five members of the union executive were falsely accused in 1996 of planting a bomb in the plant during a labour dispute. The union members were badly beaten by police and then three were thrown in jail for six months only to be released after regional prosecutors found that the charges were groundless. At the bottler’s Cucata and Barrancabermeja plants, union members were forced into hiding after receiving death threats from paramilitaries beginning in 1999. In a similar story to the Carepa plant, the manager in Barrancabermeja openly collaborated with and supported paramilitaries, according to the lawsuit. This well documented case illustrates how the management at Bebidas y Alimentos, colluded with paramilitaries to commit murder and destroy the SINALTRAINAL union local in Carepa. But how are these bottling plants such as Bebidas y Alimentos and Panamco linked to Coke’s corporate headquarters in Atlanta? In the case of Bebidas, it receives its supply of Coke products from Coke Colombia – Coke’s subsidiary in Colombia – which are then bottled and distributed throughout Colombia. Coke Colombia monitors and controls all aspects of Bebidas’ bottler’s agreement with Coke, including 184 185 ibid, pp 22-23 Ibid, p 23 34 16 186 Coke’s requirements for product quality, presentation, marketing and bottling. The union sponsored lawsuit claims that the bottler’s agreement gives Coke control over small details of production and distribution including: approved containers, boxes, stamps; the right to inspect the products; the imposition of standards concerning employee qualification and appearance; the monitoring of labour relations and practices of its subsidiaries and bottlers; the right to terminate bottler’s agreements for noncompliance with their terms and conditions; the right to conduct inspections and monitor day-to-day compliance with the bottler’s agreement through frequent 187 reports. Due to the extent of Coke’s influence over its bottlers through bottler’s agreements, the lawsuit states that Bebidas is “subject to the ultimate control of Coke because the business exists solely at the pleasure of Coke”, and that Coke has complete control over “Panamco and Bebidas y 188 Alimentos because these companies exist solely to bottle and distribute Coke products”. One striking example of Coke’s control over Bebidas is their refusal to let Richard Kirby and Richard Kirby Keilland sell the company in 1997. In the case of Coke and Panamco the two companies are linked both financially and through Coke executives serving on Panamco’s Board of Directors. In 1996 Coke owned a 13% interest in the Panamco bottling company while two Coca-Cola Company executives sat on Panamco’s Board of Directors. A judge in Miami ruled these links were insufficient and removed Coke from the lawsuit in March 2003 saying that the company does not set labour policies at independently owned bottling plants. In April 2004, SINALTRAINAL filed an amendment to the lawsuit in the Miami Federal Court claiming that due to recent restructuring of Coca-Cola’s bottling network in Latin America, 189 where Coca-Cola Femsa purchased Panamco (May 2003), the company’s main bottler in 190 Colombia, Coca-Cola can be held liable. According to witnesses quoted in a Colombia Solidarity Campaign report, Panamco is explicitly linked to paramilitary leaders through financial donations. The report states that Panamco official Jhon Ordonez makes monthly payments to 191 paramilitary leaders in Cucuta. Meanwhile, union leaders who work at Coca-Cola bottlers continue to live in fear for their lives. After exhausting all legal avenues in Colombia, SINALTRAINAL began a worldwide boycott of Coke products in July 2003. The campaign has brought worldwide attention to victims of Coke’s complicity with assassination, harassment and displacement of many workers in their bottling facilities in Colombia. Some other incidents of violence and harassment against Coke workers and their families in Colombia: rd June 2005 – On June 3 paramilitaries in Barranquilla kidnapped 5 students who were working with SINALTRAINAL on Coke’s environmental record. The students were threatened with death if 192 they ever protested outside a Coke plant again. They were released the same day. th April 2004 – On April 20 , a number of armed men entered the house of Coke worker and union activist Efrain Guerrero’s brother-in-law in Bucaramanga and opened fire at the family. The 186 Ibid 11 ibid, 12 188 ibid, pp. 13,14 189 The merger was actually orchestrated by The Coca-Cola Company, for more information visit: http://www.killercoke.org/pdf/collmerg.pdf 190 Liu, B., “Colombian Union Renews Coke Suit”, Financial Times, April 17, 2004. 191 “The Anti-Coke Manifesto”, Colombia Solidarity Campaign, 2005, http://www.polarisinstitute.org/polaris_project/water_lords/campaigns/anticokefinal1.pdf 192 “The people vs Coke”, Colombia Solidarity Campaign, http://www.colombiasolidarity.org.uk/cocacolacampaign/peoplevscoke.html 187 35 17 gunmen killed Guerrero’s brother-in-law, Gabriel Remolina, his wife Fanny Remolina and one of 193 their children, Robinson Remolina. th November 2004 – On November 17 , paramilitaries delivered death threats to the regional headquarters of the CUT (a Brazilian labour federation) in Bucaramanga. The letter read as follows: "This threat is directed towards those trade unionists who oppose the governor, the mayor and those private companies who are supporting the policies of the government of Dr Alvaro Uribe Velez. We inform you that we have made a military judgment to force you from the areas under our influence, or to kill you. We will show no mercy to those trade unionists who have initiated legal proceedings against government of private company officials. For this reason we have declared the following as military objectives: David Florez Martha Diaz Teresa Baez Efraín Guerrero Carlos Castro Javier Jiménez Rafael Ovalle Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia (AUC), Santander." All of the people mentioned in the letter are members of the CUT. Efrain Guerrero works at Coke’s Bucaramanga plant and is the leader of SINALTRAINAL at the facility. This is 194 the second time that Guerrero has received death threats. nd, October 2002 – On October 2 a known paramilitary, Saul Rincon, along with another man were seen monitoring a union protest at the entrance to Coke’s plant in Barrancabermeja. The men entered the plant and spoke with the managers. Three days later Rincon warned that local SINALTRAINAL leader Juan Carlos Galvis was an assassination target. Rincon was later seen spying in Galvis’ neighbourhood. Close to a year later in August 2003, Galvis was shot at by a 195 number of paramilitaries, but managed to escape with his life. August 2001 – The AUC (Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia – paramilitary units) published death threats against two Coke workers and union activists in the Barrancabermeja publication La Noticia. On Christmas Eve of the same year both men found AUC greeting cards in their 196 lockers. For more information on Coke’s human rights abuses please visit the following websites: Campaign to Stop Killer Coke - http://www.killercoke.org/ Colombia Human Rights Network - http://colhrnet.igc.org/ Colombia Solidarity Campaign - http://www.colombiasolidarity.org.uk SIANLTRAINAL - http://www.sinaltrainal.org/ 193 Communique between SINALTRAINAL and the Colombia Solidarity Campaign, April 20th, 2004, http://www.colombiasolidarity.org.uk/UA%20Apr-Jun%2004/UA04.04.20.html 194 “Bucaramanga: More death threats against Coca Cola worker and trade unionists”, Colombia Solidarity Campaign press release, November 17, 2005, http://www.colombiasolidarity.org.uk/UA%20Oct-Dec%2004/UA04.11.22.html 195 “The Anti-Coke Manifesto”, Colombia Solidarity Campaign, 2005, http://www.polarisinstitute.org/polaris_project/water_lords/campaigns/anticokefinal1.pdf 196 ibid 36 18 4.2 India197: “Without access to clean and safe water, natural systems are threatened, economies sputter, and communities wither. For companies like ours, continuing success depends on ensuring adequate water for both ourselves and for the communities where we operate. We are committed to benefiting and refreshing consumers and their communities, and 198 being an active partner in addressing water challenges is a crucial part of that commitment.” From Coke’s website Coke has had a long and volatile relationship with India. The company originally began selling its products during the 1950s but was eventually kicked out of the country in 1977 for violating investment laws. Coke refused to abide by India’s Foreign Exchange Regulation Act which required Multi-Nationals to sell 60% of their equity to an Indian interest. Coke refused, and was forced to leave the country. In 1993, in a new political and economic climate of liberalized trade and investment policy, Coke was allowed back into the country where they promptly purchased 199 the leading domestic soft drink brand. Since then, Coke has invested more than $1 billion in India. The company operates 27 wholly owned bottling plants and another 17 franchise owned bottling operations and is constantly looking to expand its presence in a country where it sees a 200 huge market for its products. However, all is not well for Coke in India. In 2002 Since 2002, Coke has come face to face with strong resistance to their ongoing water takings, their environmental pollution and the discovery of high levels of pesticides in their products. One community, after a long and bitter struggle, has been successful in shutting down production at a local bottling plant. The fight against Coke has spread to other parts of the country, beginning a movement that could bring about a repeat of 1977. Plachimada – Coke meets its match Coke opened its plant in Plachimada in 1998, digging 65 wells with the capacity to extract 1.5 201 million liters of water each day from the aquifer. The company received 15% cash back on its investment in the Plachimada factory by the government of Kerala, in return for moving into an 202 impoverished region within the state. In Kerala, the desire of the provincial and national governments to attract investment from multinationals like Coke has meant that communities are losing control of their natural resources. Since Coke set up shop in Plachimada and began extracting vast amounts of water and adding polluting sludge to farm fields, local farmers have seen their wells dry up and crop yields shrink forcing many to abandon their farms. In June 2005, the state Water Resources Department found that in 16 wells around the plant water levels dropped significantly in nine of them while one dried up completely between 2002 and 2004. The study also found that between May 2003 and May 203 2004 ground level dropped in 11 of the 16 wells. Despite the region’s extended droughts, Coke continued to extract water from their boreholes, while 2000 families in the area were being adversely affected by the lack of water. Due to low water levels, families would walk long distances twice a day to find suitable drinking water while others were forced to try alternative crops. Salination and residues from bottle washing had rendered what little water remained 204 useless. One local farmer commented that his irrigation pump “used to run for 12 hours throughout the night; now it runs dry after 30 minutes…Coke managed to acquire all the lowest 197 For timely updates on resistance movements against Coke’s operations in India please visit: http://www.indiaresource.org 198 The Coca Cola Company, Website, http://www2.coca-cola.com/citizenship/water.html 199 Multinational Monitor, “Backwash: Coke Returns from India Exile”, An Interview with George Fernandes, July August 1995, Vol. 16, No. 7&8 200 Ranjith, K.R., “Holy Water From the West”, Altermedia: Thrissur, 2004, p. 48 201 Vidal, J., Coke on trial as Indian villagers accuse plant of sucking them dry, The Guardian, November 19, 2003 202 Stuart, L., “Multinationals should face the same rules no matter where they set up shop”, The Guardian, August 11, 2003 203 “Ground water level down in Plachimada”, The Economic Times, July 6, 2005 204 Ranjith, K.R., “Holy Water From the West”, Altermedia: Thrissur, 2004, 58 37 19 lying land in the area and after digging a series of deep wells they took all the water. Its downright 205 theft.” The worst affected are the 10,000 landless labourers who relied on working on these farms for a livelihood. The shortage of water became so severe at one point that Coke itself was trucking water from outside the region as their boreholes had dried up. When the suffering of the people in Plachimada reached a limit, farmers and community members began to organize resistance in order to regain control of their rights to the water and soil which was being used extensively by Coke. A non-violent protest began outside the plant in April 2002. A powerful group of local people began the protest sitting stoically under a Samarapanthal or thatched shed and have maintained their presence for over two years. Even though major political parties in Kerala province distanced themselves from the protests the struggle against Coke grew. The people demanded that Coke should work to restore groundwater resources and ensure a continuous water supply for the affected area, or leave Plachimada 206 forever. The protests continued despite counter efforts by the corporation and repression from the police who have arrested hundreds of protestors. The sustained determination of the resistance combined with a BBC documentary exposing how Coke was selling contaminated ‘fertilizer’ to local farmers, finally gained the attention of the mainstream media. Coke responded with vehement denials of any wrongdoing and has hired a public relations firm to improve their image 207 in India. In April 2003, the Village Council asserted their right to the self-determination of natural resources and revoked Coke’s license. After arguing before the Kerala High Court, Coke managed to reverse the decision. The Village Council filed another petition in High Court and on December 16, 2003, the Court historically declared that the local self-government body has the right to 208 control the water exploitation by Coke’s Plachimada plant. The judgment rejected Coke’s claims and forced the company to stop exploitation of water reserves and find alternative water resources within one month. Since the December order came down, a seesaw battle has ensued between the Village Council, Coke and the Kerala state government. Coke was given reprieve by the state government on the decision not to renew their license. However, on April 7, the court stayed the original order on a petition filed by the president of the Village Council who says that the state government has been interfering with the Village Council’s constitutional power to issue or suspend a license or impose 209 conditions on an industry . While the legal battle continues, a February 21, 2004 order is preventing the plant from drawing ground water until June 15 when monsoon rains are expected to arrive. The order will not prevent production at the plant, but stops the withdrawal of water from local groundwater. Meanwhile, the protests, which passed the 2 year mark on April 22, continue. Dirty Coke and the spread of resistance In January 2004 the Indian parliament banned the sale of Coke as well as Pepsi products in its cafeteria after tests found high concentrations of pesticides and insecticides, including lindane, 205 Clarke, J., Stuart, L., “Coke Adds Life? In India, Impoverished Farmers are Fighting to Stop Drinks Giant Destroying Livelihoods”, The Independent, July 25, 2003 206 Ranjith, K.R., “Holy Water From the West”, Altermedia: Thrissur, 2004, p. 60 207 Srivastava, A., “Coke with Yet Another New Twist: Toxic Cola”, India Resource Center, January 31, 2004, http://www.indiaresource.org/campaigns/coke/2004/coketwist.html 208 Ranjith, K.R., “Holy Water From the West”, Altermedia: Thrissur, 2004, p. 63. 209 Surendranath, C., “Coke vs People: The Heat is on in Plachimada”, India Resource Center, April 14, 2004, http://www.indiaresource.org/campaigns/coke/2004/heatison.html 38 20 210 DDT, malathion and chlorpyrifos, in the colas, making them unfit for consumption. Some test samples showed toxin levels 30 times the standard allowed by the European Union. Coke products from India rejected entrance to the United States In May 2005 the US Food and Drug Administration (USDA) rejected a shipment of Fanta sent by Coca-Cola India to the United States. The USDA said that the products appeared to contain an unsafe colour additive. A Coca-Cola India representative claimed that Fanta has never been 211 exported to the United States. Adding to Coke’s problems in India, Villagers living in Mehdiganj near Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh, Kudus, in the Wada taluka of the Thane district and Sivaganga in TamilNadu - all regions 212 experiencing acute water crises - have begun protests at local Coke plants. Some recent updates from India: June-July 2005, Kerala • July 22 – The State Government of Kerala moved to take Coke to the Supreme Court of India challenging the company’s right to extract groundwater. The announcement made by Local Self-Government Minister Kutty Ahmed Kutty, challenges the April 7 Kerala High 213 Court ruling. • June 13 – The Panchayat (village council) rejects Coke’s application for a two-year 214 license. 215 • June 9 – Coke files an application with the Panchayat for a two year license. th • June 6 – The Panchayat issued Coke a three month conditional license on June 6 . th Coke rejected the temporary license saying that it was in violation of the April 7 High Court order entitling the company to draw 500,000 litres of groundwater a day at its plant 216 in Plachimada. • June 1 – The High court of Kerala directed the Panchayat to renew Coke’s license within 217 a week. April 2005, Kerala • On April 28, the Panchayat of Kerala rejected Coke’s application for the renewal of its license for the company’s plant in Plachimada. The Panchayat claims that Coke did not supply the required documents with its application, including a clearance from the state 218 pollution control board. th • On April 7 The Kerala High Court entitled Coke to draw 500,000 litres of groundwater a day from its plant in Plachimada under normal rainfall conditions. The court ruled that the Panchayat did not have the authority to cancel the license issued to the company. The court also directed the company to ensure regular water supply for residents and to 219 prepare an action plan to cover villager’s social security and healthcare. March 2005, Palakkad – Thousand of people demanding the closure of Coke and Pepsi factories in the Palakkad district formed a human chain between Pepsi’s bottling plant in Kanjikode and 210 Srivastava, A., “Coke with Yet Another New Twist: Toxic Cola”, India Resource Center, January 31, 2004, http://www.indiaresource.org/campaigns/coke/2004/coketwist.html 211 “US rejects Coke, HLL, P&G, Britannia Shipments”, Financial Express, June 9, 2005 212 Ranjith, K.R., “Holy Water From the West”, Altermedia: Thrissur, 2004, p. 68, 69. 213 “Indian State takes Coca-Cola to court; Sales drop 14% in Summer”, India Resource Center, July 22, 2005, http://indiaresource.org/news/2005/1086.html 214 “Panchayat rejects Coke’s plea for a two year licence”, The Press Trust of India, June 13, 2005 215 ibid 216 “Coke rejects conditional licence, files another plea”, The Hindu, June 10, 2005 217 “Kerala HC asks Panchayat to renew Coca Cola licence”, The Press Trust of India, June 1, 2005 218 “This Kerala village wants Coke out”, Hindustan Times, April 30, 2005 219 “Coca-Cola firm gets nod for drawing groundwater”, The Hindu, April 8, 2005 39 21 Coke’s operation in Plachimada. Protesters included political leaders, students, environmentalists 220 and community members. March 2005, Kaladera, Rajasthan – The village council (Panchayat) of Kaladera adopted a resolution that it would issue a notice to Coke demanding that it close down its bottling plant in the village. The demand will be issued because of what they say is Coke’s ‘indiscriminate exploitation’ of ground water reserves that has led to a sharp decline in the water table. The resolution states that “the extraction of colossal amounts of water by the Coca-Cola factory has 221 destroyed agriculture in Kaladera and nearby villages.” th January 15, 2005, Plachimada – January 15, 2005 marked the 100 day of struggle against Coke for the people of Plachimada. November 2004, Mehdiganj, Varanasi – On November 24, over a thousand community members adversely affected by Coke marched to the Coca-Cola factory in Mehdiganj, near Varanasi. The rally brought an end to a 10-day, 250km march from the site of another Coke plant in Ballia to Mehdiganj, bringing attention to Coke’s negative impacts on communities across India. Marchers who decided to approach the factory gates, which were heavily guarded by armed police, were met with a brutal baton (lathi) charge. Over 350 people were arrested and 222 approximately 100 injured. For more information on Coke’s ongoing abuses in India please visit the India Resource Center’s website: http://www.indiaresource.org/ 4.3 Racial discrimination in the workplace: Class action lawsuits and multimillion-dollar settlements In April 1999, a group of Coke employees filed a class-action lawsuit accusing the corporation of systemic racial discrimination against African Americans. The lawsuit was brought by four current and past employees on behalf of themselves and almost 2000 other former and current Coke employees. The class action lawsuit brought together a damning list of corporate behaviour. The list of racially discriminatory workplace practices was split into the following 6 categories: • Discrimination in evaluations: The suit claimed that performance evaluations system implemented by managers, made biased and inconsistent determinations on evaluation scores, which permitted racial discrimination. The evaluation scores decided who would receive raises or promotions. The lawsuit stated that “because of the undue discretion of managers, African-Americans receive lower evaluation scores than Caucasians and 223 fewer high scores”. • Discrimination in compensation: Dramatic differences between salaries paid by Coke to African Americans and White employees at the company’s headquarters and throughout the corporation were revealed in the lawsuit. In 1995 the average AfricanAmerican employee in the corporate headquarters received $19,000 less than the 224 average white employee, while in 1998 the disparity had risen to $27,000. 220 “Thousands form Human Chain for Closure of soft drink units”, The Hindu, March 30, 2005 “Rajasthan village council wants coca-cola out”, India Resource Center press release, March 15, 2005, http://www.indiaresource.org/news/2005/1009.html 222 “Police attach Coca-Cola protest, over 350 arrested”, India Resource Center press release, November 25, 2004, http://www.indiaresource.org/press/2004/mehdiganjattack.html 223 United States District Court Northern District of Georgia, Civil Action No. 1-98-CV-3679, http://www.essentialaction.org/spotlight/coke/complaint.html#IV 224 ibid 221 40 22 • Discrimination in promotions: Promotions opportunities were not posted and occur through management nominations, which amounted to little more than word of mouth recommendations and closed procedures. “Jobs are filled without being posted, candidates are handpicked in advance, and supervisors who make hiring decisions disregard the results of panel interviews and manipulate scores in order to ensure that their favorites are chosen. As a result of this kind of discrimination, African-Americans are denied the opportunity to advance to the same level and at the same rate as equally 225 qualified Caucasian employees.” • Glass ceiling: African-American employees at Coke experience a glass ceiling, blocking equal opportunity advancement to top level positions at the company. Compared to the significant number of salaried African-American employees at Coke, very few make it to senior levels in the company. While African-American employees make up 15.7 percent of the employees at corporate headquarters, they are underrepresented at top pay-grade 226 levels. • Glass walls: The suit also found that organizational barriers segregate the company into divisions where African-American leadership is acceptable, and divisions where it is not. African-Americans in senior positions are concentrated in less powerful and non-revenue 227 generating areas. • Terminations: According to the lawsuit, African-American employees at Coke are involuntarily terminated at a much higher rate than white employees. In 1997, there were 62 involuntary terminations at Coke’s corporate headquarters, and African-American employees accounted for about 37% of those, or 23 people. Whites, who make up over 77% of the employees in the corporate office, accounted for fewer than 50% of the terminations in 1997. The lawsuit also outlined cases where white Coke executives and managers had been discriminatory. In one case a white Vice President of Advertising told an African-American advertising agency that “I don’t hire you to do good advertising, I hire you to do black advertising...it’s not my fault you are black – it’s yours”. In another case, Coke’s marketing strategy succumbs to racial stereotyping. For example, during a presentation about ethnic marketing in 1998 a white brand manager showed a picture of an inner city neighborhood and said “this is where black people live” and then stated that American musician L.L. Cool J featured in a Coke commercial should be sitting in the ghetto instead of on the steps of an attractive 228 suburban house. In another situation, one of the plaintiffs received a low evaluation after making comments about racial discrimination, even though she had always received positive evaluations. Such examples were not simply from a few isolated incidents; rather the lawsuit argued they represented a company-wide pattern. As the trial proceeded, Coke denied any wrongdoing. Coke initially responded to the lawsuit saying that actions toward the four African-American plaintiffs "were in no way motivated by 229 race...but instead were based solely on legitimate, nondiscriminatory business reasons." The CEO at the time, Douglas Ivester, sent an email to all Coke employees a week after the suit was filed saying that the suit had “significant errors of fact” and that the company does not 230 systematically discriminate against African-Americans. Coke’s manager of share-holder affairs sent a similar letter to all share-holders trying to soothe investors over the lawsuit. The letter stated that "while we [Coke] believe the lawsuit is without merit, I wanted to write and assure you that our management team takes these allegations seriously. Discrimination in any form is not 225 ibid ibid ibid 228 ibid 229 Unger, H., Hosendolph, E. “Coke, plaintiffs in court today”, Atlanta Journal and Constitution, May 13, 1999 230 Unger, H., “Coke chief: Suit wrong but serious”, Atlanta Journal and Constitution, April 30, 1999 226 227 41 23 231 tolerated." The Company continued to deny any wrongdoing In December 1999 when a Coke spokesperson, commenting on the ongoing lawsuit said that the company "will demonstrate that 232 Coca-Cola has not, does not and will not tolerate discrimination of any kind." In July of the same year, the company said that “we're confident it will be determined that Coca -Cola does not 233 discriminate." After a long legal battle, a settlement was reached in principle in June 2000 and was finalized in November 2000 when Coke agreed to pay out a record $192.5 million, the largest settlement in a US race discrimination lawsuit. Despite denying any wrongdoing for months, Coke agreed to pay $113 million in direct compensation and another $43.5 million towards the elimination of pay 234 disparities. Twenty three people who were covered in the suit opted out of the settlement to pursue their own settlements against the company. The settlement also ordered the establishment of a task force designed to monitor the company’s progress in complying with the settlement guidelines. After the settlement was finalized, Coke’s new CEO Doug Daft sent a contrite e-mail to all of Coke’s employees worldwide saying that “"Today we are closing a painful chapter in our company's history… The settlement is meaningful, constructive and equitable to all parties and allows us to move forward. . . . In fact, we will not rest until we have reclaimed our position as the best of the best in these matters and restored the confidence of every person who touches the 235 Coca-Cola Co." In 2002, two years after the settlement was reached, the court appointed panel in charge of monitoring Coke’s human resources practices, found that minority employees at Coke continue to have issues with fairness in career advancement, pay decisions and the company’s commitment 236 to equal opportunity. An April 2002 report in the Washington Post quoted one Coke employee who opted out of the settlement saying that “Coca-Cola has done a wonderful job of fooling the public into believing that the racial discrimination lawsuit is over…It’s not over. And I’m not interested in settling. The only way to expose the racism at Coca-Cola is to have our day in 237 court.” The second of the four annual reports to be submitted to US district judge by the bias task force found in December 2003 that the company had failed to implement a number of planned changes and that the North American restructuring of the company has led to a disproportionate number of executive positions filled by white men. The report also said that the company failed to make recommended changes to its interview process or to develop a diverse candidature for executive 238 positions. Minority employees negatively rated the company’s record on diversity in the report. 4.4 Labour This section will outline a selection of strikes, walkouts and labour negotiations that have taken place at various Coke bottling plants since 1994. Australia – In September 2001, 140 employees at a Coca-Cola Amatil bottling plant and warehouse in Melbourne went on strike after the company moved to cancel a bargaining 231 Unger, H., “Coca-Cola tries to soothe investors on suit”, Atlanta Journal and Constitution, May 7, 1999 McCarthy, M., “Racial bias suit at Coke awaits CEO New chief must tackle diversity issues”, USA Today, December 13, 1999 233 Unger, H., “Class-action part of Coca-Cola suit is not dismissed”, Atlanta Journal and Constitution, July 16, 1999 234 Unger, H., “Coke to Settle Racial Suit with $192.5 Million Deal”, Atlanta Journal Constitution, November 17, 2000 235 Unger, H., “Coke to settle racial suit with $ 192.5 million deal”, Atlanta Journal and Constitution, November 17, 2000 236 Day, S., “Anti-Bias Task Force Gives Coca-Cola Good Marks, but Says Challenges Remain”, New York Times, September 26, 2002 237 White, B., “Black Coca-Cola Workers Still Angry”, Washington Post, Thursday, April 18, 2002 238 Newkirk, M., “Bias Report Criticizes Coke: Planned Changes Fell Short , Judge Told”, Atlanta Journal And Constitution, December 18, 2003 232 42 24 agreement. The Liquor, Hospitality and Miscellaneous Workers Union claimed the company was 239 clearing the way to introduce individual contracts. Australia – In December 2004, Coca-Cola Amatil was ordered to pay AUS$3 million compensation for failing to protect a former contractor who was shot five times while loading a vending machine. Craig Douglas Pareezer sued the company in the New South Wales Supreme Court for negligence after he was shot in the head, chest, stomach, leg and hand. The attack occurred in 1997. After being attacked in the same area in 1995, Pareezer returned to work only after the company promised he would not have to go back to the neighbourhood. However, when another worker was injured, Pareezer reluctantly made a trip there and was attacked in a robbery attempt. The Justice in the case ruled in September 2004 that the company was liable for Pareezer’s injuries, saying that it failed to protect him when it knew drivers were a target of 240 robberies. Canada – In November 2003, 50 workers at a Coke bottling plant in Cobourg, Ontario went on strike over wages, shift premiums, uniform allowance, better language for temporary workers and severance packages. After over a month on the picket lines, a deal was finalized in December 241 2003. El Salvador – A 2004 report by Human Rights Watch found that sugar used in drinks for domestic consumption in El Salvador is regularly processed from Sugar Cane harvested by child labourers. The report found that El Salvador’s largest sugar mill, which supplies Coke with one of its main ingredients, is supplied with sugar cane from at least four plantations that regularly use child labour. The report stated that: “In Coca-Cola’s case, child labor helped produce a key ingredient in its beverages bottled in El Salvador. In that sense, Coca-Cola indirectly benefits 242 from child labor.” Guatemala – In 2002 PANAMCO, Coke’s biggest bottler in Latin America now owned by CocaCola FEMSA, used questionable tactics during a difficult collective bargaining situation with Guatemala’s food and beverage workers’ federation FESTRAS. PANAMCO’s demands would have eroded conditions protected by an existing collective agreement. In order to sway the negotiations in their favour, PANAMCO pursued legal action to dismiss eight union representatives from the plant who were taking approved leave to participate in the bargaining. They also filed a court order alleging that the workers’ vote authorizing strike action should have included confidential and management employees essentially asking the court to declare unconstitutional a section of the labour code that specifies that confidential and management 243 employees are not included in this type of voting. A collective bargaining agreement was reached in December 2002 that provided for general wage increases of 3% effective 1 March 2001, 4% on 1 March 2002, 5% on 1 March 2003 and 6% on 1 March 2004. In addition the union 244 retained full paid union leave for elected executive committee members. Coke has a horrible record of labour abuses in Guatemala dating back to the late 1970s and early 1980s. In 1976, workers at a Coke bottling plant in Guatemala began a nine year struggle against their employer. During that time three general secretaries of their union were assassinated while members of their families, friends and legal advisors were threatened, arrested, kidnapped, 239 “Coke workers walk off job”, Herald Sun, September 5, 2001 “Coca-Cola ‘knew of danger at venue’ $3m compo for shot contractor”, The Mercury, December 24, 2004 United Food and Commercial Workers Union, Locals 175/633 Press Release, “At Last, Cobourg Coca-Cola Workers Win a Fair Settlement”, December 11, 2003 242 “Turning a Blind Eye: Hazardous child labor in El Salvador’s sugarcane cultivation”, Human Rights Watch, June 2004, http://hrw.org/reports/2004/elsalvador0604/elsalvador0604simple.pdf 243 International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers’ Associations (IUF) Press Release, “Trade Union Rights at Risk at Coca-Cola Guatemala, September 24, 2003, http://www.iuf.org.uk/cgibin/dbman/db.cgi?db=default&uid=default&ID=487&view_records=1&ww=1&en=1 244 International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers’ Associations (IUF) Press Release, “Coca-Cola Bottler And IUF Affiliate STECSA Sign New Collective Agreement In Guatemala”, December 23, 2002, http://www.iuf.org/cgi-bin/dbman/db.cgi?db=default&uid=default&ID=656&view_records=1&ww=1&en=1 240 241 43 25 beaten, tortured, shot or forced into exile. After a long battle combined with the support of international solidarity campaigns, STEGAC, the Coke workers union, won its fight against the 245 corporation. Russia – In August 2001, the administration of Coca-Cola Hellenic Bottling Company Eurasia plant in Moscow fired the chairperson of the local trade union after being informed of the union’s existence. In October, the Moscow labour inspectorate declared the dismissal illegal and ordered 246 the worker reinstated. It was not until August 2003 that the worker was reinstated after plant management announced it would respect the court’s decision as well has provide the worker 350,000 rubles to cover two years’ back pay. As of September 2003 the worker had only received 15,000 rubles while Coca-Cola HBC Eurasia Moscow filed an appeal for the reconsideration of 247 the July agreement that reinstated the worker. Coke HBC has a history of actively fighting the unionization of its operations in Russia. Russia – Approximately 20 Coca-Cola Hellenic Bottling Company Eurasia employees picketed a St. Petersburg plant on May 20, 2005, demanding management index their salaries to inflation, adhere to labour laws and observe the rights of trade unions. The Chair of the plant’s trade union, Vladimir Okhrimenko, said that employees are sometimes ordered to work six or seven days a week as well as long working hours. He said salaries at the plant, which employs 300, have not 248 been indexed to inflation for several years. Coca-Cola has 11 bottling plants in Russia. United States – In April 2004, 470-500 production, warehouse employees, Drivers and maintenance workers at Philadelphia’s Coca-Cola Bottling co. went on strike over pay, benefits and respect at work. Workers believed that a strike was the only way they would gain respect on the job. After a week-long strike workers won a 35-cent per hour pay raise increased pension 249 benefits and a bonus of up to $900. United States – On May 23, 2005, workers at Coca-Cola bottling and distribution facilities in Hartford Connecticut and Los Angeles went on Strike. The workers are striking over the breakdown of contract negotiations and Coke’s continuing push to have workers pay more for their healthcare benefits. In Connecticut Approximately 345 production workers, drivers and merchandisers at a Coca-Cola Enterprise (CCE) bottling plant were on strike while In California 250 close to 1,700 workers at six Southern California CCE locations. All of the workers were members of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters union. The strike ended the two-week strike on June 7 after the union approved a five-year contract giving workers improved health251 care benefits and an 85 cent-an-hour annual pay raise. Layoffs – In January 2000, Coke laid off 6,000 workers from its global workforce. A large scale job cut had not happened at Coke since 1988 when the company terminated 200 jobs. In 2003 Approximately 3,700 employees were laid off by Coca-Cola and its subsidiaries. 4.5 Environment Water Takings (see social profile above for information on Coke’s water takings in India) 245 For more information on this case please refer to, Gatehouse M., Reyes, M.A., “Soft Drink Hard Labour: Guatemalan Workers Take On Coca-Cola”, London: Latin American Bureau, 1987 246 International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers’ Associations (IUF) Press Release, “Coke Fights Unions in Russia”, November 26, 2001, http://www.iuf.org/cgibin/dbman/db.cgi?db=default&uid=default&ID=71&view_records=1&ww=1&en=1 247 International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers’ Associations (IUF) Press Release, “Coca-Cola Continues to Oppose Union Organization in Russia”, September 18, 2003, http://www.iuf.org/cgi-bin/dbman/db.cgi?db=default&uid=default&ID=1057&view_records=1&ww=1&en=1 248 “Workers picket Coca-Cola bottler in Russia over pay, labour rules”, Associated Press, May 20, 2005 249 Von Bergen, J., “Coca-Cola Bottling workers end strike”, The Philadelphia Inquirer, April 30, 2004 250 Spano, J., “Coca-Cola plant workers go on strike”, Los Angeles Times, May 23, 2005 251 White, R., “Teamsters’ Coca-Cola contract includes better pay, benefits”, Los Angeles Times, June 7, 2005 44 26 Australia – Coca-Cola Amatil, Coke’s main Australian bottler of which it owns 34%, has come up against fierce resistance by city councillors in Gosford in eastern Australia. Coca-Cola Amatil is hoping to expand its bottling operations at a nearby plant and is hoping to triple its water extraction to 41 million litres a year. In May 2005, the company filed an action against the Gosford 252 council with the Land and Environment Court over the access to underground water. City Councillors from neighbouring Wyong have pledged their support for Gosford council in its legal battle with the corporation. The region is in the middle of its worst drought in 100 years. Gosford is situated approximately 110 kilometres north of Sydney. Recycling – Each day in the United States, Coke sells 25 million plastic (PET, or polyethylene terephtalate) bottles. Coke’s bottlers use new PET bottles from non-renewable resources to manufacture millions of bottles of soda and juice each day. According to the Grass Roots Recycling Network, 10 billion plastic Coke bottles containing over 800 million pounds of virgin 253 plastic are discarded in one year. Sixty four percent of all plastic bottles are thrown into the garbage largely because companies like Coke refuse to take their bottles back. Ten years after Coke pledged to use more post consumer plastics, they substantially downgraded their plans, 254 announcing that they would use only 10% recycled content in 25% of their plastic soda bottles. Legislation in the United States does not hold beverage companies accountable for the waste they produce, thus removing responsibility from companies like Coke and Pepsi. The beverage industry consistently lobbies against recycling bills (bottle bills) in order to continue using the cheaper and more wasteful option of producing new bottles. New bottles are cheaper in part because of Coke’s signal to the plastic bottle industry that they were moving back to using only virgin plastic. This, in turn brought down the price of recycled plastic driving many recyclers out of 255 business. Coke’s practice of using only virgin plastic and actively opposing bottler bills in the United States is aimed at ensuring more profits for the company. The switch to recycled plastic in the US is completely feasible for the company whose bottler’s in other countries uses recycled plastic and refillable bottles. Drought – Coke’s carbonated and bottled water beverage lines rely on large volumes of water taken directly from municipal water systems which in turn rely on the capacities of local watersheds. As described earlier, Coke’s bottling operations in parts of India have had deleterious impacts on the water tables where bottling plants are located. Similar affects may be likely in Coke’s bottling plants in American States where drought is a major problem. For a list of locations for Coke bottling plants located in drought sensitive States please see Appendix 2 below. 252 Elbra, T., “It’s Gosford and Wyong v Coca-Cola”, Daily Telegraph, May 19, 2005 As You Sow Website, http://www.asyousow.org/ 254 Aftandilian, D., “Coke’s Broken Promise,” Conscious Choice, February 2000 255 Grass Roots Recycling Project, Coca-Cola Campaign, Just the Facts, http://www.grrn.org/coke/cc-facts.html 253 45 27 I. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY In January 2004, New York City Council Member Hiram Monserrate and a delegation of union, student and community activists traveled to Colombia to investigate allegations by Coca-Cola workers that the company is complicit in the human rights abuses the workers have suffered. The delegation met with Coke officials and workers, as well as a variety of governmental, human rights and clergy representatives. The findings of the New York City Fact-Finding Delegation on Coca-Cola in Colombia support the workers’ claims that the company bears responsibility for the human rights crisis affecting its workforce. To date, there have been a total of 179 major human rights violations of Coca-Cola’s workers, including nine murders. Family members of union activists have been abducted and tortured. Union members have been fired for attending union meetings. The company has pressured workers to resign their union membership and contractual rights, and fired workers who refused to do so. Most troubling to the delegation were the persistent allegations that paramilitary violence against workers was done with the knowledge of and likely under the direction of company managers. The physical access that paramilitaries have had to Coca-Cola bottling plants is impossible without company knowledge and/or tacit approval. Shockingly, company officials admitted to the delegation that they had never investigated the ties between plant managers and paramilitaries. The company’s inaction and its ongoing refusal to take any responsibility for the human rights crisis faced by its workforce in Colombia demonstrates—at best— disregard for the lives of its workers. Coca-Cola’s complicity in the situation is deepened by its repeated pattern of bringing criminal charges against union activists who have spoken out about the company’s collusion with paramilitaries. These charges have been dismissed without merit on several occasions. The conclusion that Coca-Cola bears responsibility for the campaign of terror leveled at its workers is unavoidable. The delegation calls on the company to rectify the situation immediately, and calls on all people of conscience to join in putting pressure on the company to do so. 28 II. DELEGATION HISTORY, PARTICIPANTS AND MANDATE New York City Council Member Hiram Monserrate and five labor and community activists traveled to Colombia from January 8th through January 18th to investigate allegations by Colombian workers at Coca-Cola bottling plants that Coke is complicit in the violence against union leaders and members. This trip was the result of an investigative process and a dialogue with the company that began almost a year ago. Monserrate, representing the large and growing Colombian community in Jackson Heights and Elmhurst, Queens, organized the New York City Fact-Finding Delegation on Coca-Cola in Colombia—a coalition of students, human rights activists, and U.S. trade unionists and members of the Colombian immigrant community living in the New York City—to ensure that one of Coca-Cola’s largest markets, New York City, is not underwriting labor abuses beyond our borders. At Monserrate’s request, the councilman and others from the delegation met with top Coca-Cola officials in July 2003 to discuss the human rights crisis facing Coke workers in Colombia. During that meeting, company officials testified that the allegations of company ties to the paramilitaries carrying out the violence, threats and intimidation were false. The delegation asked Coca-Cola to sponsor an independent fact-finding mission to Colombia to investigate and assess the workers’ allegations of company involvement in the extra-legal violence against them. Following the July 2003 meeting, Coca-Cola responded in writing that the “Company does not anticipate supporting in any way any form of ‘independent fact-finding delegation to Colombia,’” and that allegations would only be reviewed locally. Believing firmly that the matter demanded an investigation, Monserrate and other delegation members then undertook to organize the trip that took place in January 2004. The delegation participants in that trip were: Monserrate, representing the 21st City Council district in Queens; Dorothee Benz, representing Communications Workers of America (CWA) Local 1180; Lenore Palladino, the national director of United Students Against Sweatshops (USAS); Segundo Pantoja, representing the Professional Staff Congress-City University of New York (PSC-CUNY); Jose Schiffino, representing the Civil Service Employees Association (CSEA); and Luis Castro, assistant and community liaison to Councilman Monserrate. The New York City Fact-Finding Delegation on Coca-Cola in Colombia’s mandate for the January 2004 trip was to investigate the violence against Coca-Cola workers, to talk first hand with officials and workers from the company, and to assess the allegations of company complicity in the violence. The delegation returned on January 18, and released a preliminary report on January 29. It also initiated follow-up correspondence with the company. Following the release of the initial report, delegation members reviewed the voluminous documentation in the case they had received, and sought additional documentation that had been promised the delegation by the company. 29 The present report represents a comprehensive review of the material in hand at the time of this writing. The delegation considers the evidence conclusive, though it continues to seek out additional documentation that might shed additional light on the situation. III. NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT Colombia is the most dangerous country in the world to be a trade unionist. More unionists are killed in Colombia every year than in the rest of the world combined: 169 in 2001, 184 in 2002, 92 in 2003. In all, some 4,000 union members have been assassinated since 1986, and to date no one has been arrested, tried and convicted for a single one of these murders. In addition to murder, unionists have been subject to other forms of violence and terror, including kidnapping, beatings, death threats and intimidation. The bulk of the violence is committed by members of paramilitary units, also known as death squads, primarily the Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia (AUC). Collusion between the state military and paramilitary forces is an open secret in Colombia, and the total impunity of those who terrorize union activists only underscores the connection between legal and illegal actors seeking to suppress union activity. Colombia has been in the midst of a civil war for over four decades. Colombian unions are overwhelmingly independent and not involved in the armed struggle of the leftist guerrillas, but they are often branded by the rightist paramilitaries as guerrillas for their advocacy of social justice and social equity. Such accusations are frequently preludes to assassinations and other violence. The persecution of social justice advocates under the guise of prosecuting terrorists has also given the Colombian government an excuse to curtail the rights and liberties of unions. Unions are increasingly the subject of legal attack as well as extra-legal killings and threats. Changes in Colombian law in 1990 provided the framework for eliminating permanent employment and replacing it with contingent labor, increasing job insecurity and also greatly inhibiting the ability of unions to organize the temporary workers who now form the vast majority of the Colombian workforce. Meanwhile, a series of laws passed in December 2003 reduced social benefits and curtailed labor rights and civil liberties. The infringements on rights were passed as an “antiterrorist” statute, with arguments now familiar to those of us living in the post-9/11 U.S. The social cuts were in line with IMF “structural adjustment” demands for austerity, as are massive ongoing privatization efforts. Some 30,000 government workers have been fired; the government projects another 40,000 will also lose their jobs. The result of these trends is that unemployment stands officially at 20% while real unemployment is much higher, and underemployment is higher still. Union density has plummeted from 12% a decade ago to a mere 3.2% now. Both legal and illegal repression of unions is widely perceived in Colombia as serving the interests of multinational corporations. Indeed, the delegation heard many stories while in 30 Colombia about the collusion between companies and paramilitaries -- stories of terror campaigns where thousands were killed or driven off their land by paramilitaries preceding the entry of a multinational company into an area. Thus, the allegations against Coca-Cola about its role in the violence against its workers are typical, rather than exceptional. Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de Industrias Alimenticias (SINALTRAINAL) is the National Food Workers’ Union, which represents Colombia’s Coca-Cola employees. In July of 2001, SINALTRAINAL in conjunction with the United Steelworkers of America (USWA) and the International Labor Rights Fund (ILRF) began proceedings in the United States South Eastern District Court in Florida against the Coca-Cola Company and its Colombian subsidiaries. The lawsuit, an Alien Claims Tort Act (ACTA) civil suit filed in the Federal District Court for the Southern District of Florida, No. 01-03208-CIV, on July 21, 2001, alleges that Coca-Cola subsidiaries in Colombia were involved in a campaign of terror and murder towards its unionized workforce through the use of the right wing paramilitary troops of the AUC. Shortly thereafter, Coca-Cola filed charges in Colombian court against the U.S. plaintiffs for slander and defamation and calling for 500 million pesos in compensation. IV. DATA SOURCES AND COLLECTION While in Colombia, the delegation went to Bogota, Barranquilla, Barrancabermeja, Cali, and Bugalagrande. It met with Coca-Cola workers that had been victims of violence, intimidation, retaliation and threats, and workers and others who had been witnesses to these actions. The delegation also met with human rights organizations and activists, other unions, community organizations, and a variety of governmental officials. These additional meetings provided context and in some cases independent verification of union’s allegations against the company. The delegation videotaped all of the testimony it received from Coca-Cola workers, and upon its return to the U.S., reviewed the entire videotaped documentation in preparation for this report. Coca-Cola workers and immediate family members that we interviewed included: Person 1 [anonymous], Barranquilla, January 11 Limberto Caranza, Barranquilla, January 11 Person 2 [anonymous], Barranquilla, January 11 Person 3 [anonymous], Barranquilla, January 11 Person 4 [anonymous], Barranquilla, January 11 Oscar Giraldo, Bogotá, January 12 Hernán Manco, Bogota, January 12 William Mendoza, Barrancabermeja, January 14 Jose Domingo Flores, Barrancabermeja, January 14 In addition, the delegation met with national leaders of SINALTRAINAL, in particular Javier Correa, the president of the union, and Edgar Páez, secretary for International Affairs. It received a PowerPoint presentation entitled “Capital Accumulation and Human Rights Violations” that analyzed Coca Cola’s corporate structure, economic strategies, labor practices and profits on January 12, and was given a copy for its documentary records. Additionally, we obtained a book 31 detailing Coca-Cola’s history in Colombia, Una Delirante Ambicion Imperial, Universo Latino Publicaciones, Bogotá, 2003. On January 13th, the delegation met with two representatives of Coca-Cola/FEMSA1 in Bogota, Juan Manuel Alvarez, Director of Human Resources, and Juan Carlos Dominguez, Manager of Legal Affairs. Delegation members had tried, while still in New York, to arrange visits to CocaCola bottling plants. This request was reiterated in the January 13th meeting, and the delegation at that point asked specifically for access to the plant in Barrancabermeja. Company officials flatly refused. In the course of the meeting with Alvarez and Dominguez, they promised to send several pieces of documentation that they referred to. To date, none of this material has been received despite a letter from corporate headquarters in Atlanta testifying that these materials will be provided (Appendix H). The delegation received information about Coca-Cola’s labor practices and the violence against its workers from several other parties as well, helping to provide a larger social, economic, and political context. In Barrancabermeja, the delegation met with CREDHOS, a regional human rights organization, on January 14, and with the Organizacion Femenina Popular, a women’s organization, on January 15. In Cali on January 17, it spoke to Diego Escobar Cuellar, a representative of ASONAL JUDICIAL, the association of judicial workers. Escobar provided chilling insight into the problem of impunity, describing in detail the corruption within the judicial system and its increasing ideological alliance with the paramilitaries. “Colombian justice is an oxymoron,” he told delegation members. The delegation also met with a variety of government and political officials with whom it discussed the Coca-Cola situation. These meetings included: Congressmen Wilson Borja and Gustavo Petro; Daniel Garcia Peña, aide to Bogotá Mayor Lucho Garzón; members of the executive board of the Frente Social y Politico, a left-wing political party; Cali Mayor Apolinar Salcedo Caicedo; and the City Council of Cali. At the outset of the trip, the delegation also met with two staff members of the U.S. Embassy, Craig Conway and Stuart Tuttle, who at the time was in charge of Human Rights. V. FINDINGS Coca-Cola’s employment practices in Colombia, both those within the letter of the law and those in contravention of the law, have had the effect of driving wages, work standards and job security for Coca-Cola workers sharply downward, and simultaneously, of decimating the workers’ union, SINALTRAINAL. Both trends are reinforced by the appalling human rights violations that workers have suffered at the hands of paramilitary forces. The company denies any involvement in the threats, assassinations, kidnappings and other terror tactics, but its failure to protect its workers even on company property, its refusal to investigate 1 FEMSA, the largest bottler in Latin America, owns 45.7% of its stock, while a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Coca-Cola Company owns 39.6%, and the public 14.7%. Coca-Cola/FEMSA stock is listed on the New York Stock Exchange. 32 persistent allegations of payoffs to paramilitary leaders by plant managers, and its unwillingness to share documentation that might demonstrate otherwise leads the delegation to the conclusion that Coca-Cola is complicit in the human rights abuses of its workers in Colombia. Employment practices During the past decade, Coca-Cola has been centralizing production at its Colombian facilities at the same time that it has decentralized its workforce. In doing so, it has closed or consolidated several of its bottling plants and relied increasingly on subcontracted labor. As denounced by the Union, such practices are in violation of current law. By September 2003, Coca-Cola FEMSA had closed production lines at 11 of its 16 bottling plants. Meanwhile, workforce restructuring has slashed the ranks of Coca-Cola workers. From 1992 to 2002, some 6,700 Coca-Cola workers in Colombia lost their jobs. Eighty-eight percent of the company’s workers are now temporary workers and not part of the union. Wages have been reduced by 35% for those temp workers in the last decade, and they make one-fourth what union workers earn. Temp workers have no job security, no health insurance, and no right to organize. The company has continually pressured workers to resign their union membership and their contractual guarantees. Since September 2003, they have pressured over 500 workers to give up their union contracts in exchange for a lump-sum payment. In Barranquilla, the delegation also heard testimony from three Coke workers who said they had been fired for attending union meetings. Two of them said that they and their families are now hungry and do not have enough to cover the necessities of life. Most of the union leaders at Coca-Cola have resisted this pressure and refused to resign. Since the delegation’s return from Colombia, the company has turned up the pressure on these leaders, successfully petitioning the Colombian Ministry of Social Protection for authorization to dismiss 91 workers, 70% of whom are union leaders. SINALTRAINAL has called this “Coca-Cola’s effort to essentially eliminate the union.” In response, SINALTRAINAL began a 12-day hunger strike on March 15th in eight Colombian cities to protest 11 plant closings last year. These closings resulted in the forced resignation of 500 workers, despite Colombian law and a union contract that guarantee the right to transfer from one plant to another. Two hunger strikers were hospitalized before Femsa, a Coca-Cola subsidiary, agreed to negotiate with union leaders. Negotiations are scheduled to begin on the same day this report is released, April 2nd. Extra-legal violence The destruction of the union, and with it the ability to slash wages and eliminate benefits, is also the aim of the campaign of violence and terror that has been directed at union members at CocaCola facilities. Overall, there have been a total of 179 major human rights violations of Coke workers, including nine murders. Although violence is carried out by paramilitary rather than company actors, the union has documented the concurrence of labor negotiations with the periods of greatest violence against workers. 33 The delegation heard testimony from dozens of Coke workers and family members who had either been the victims of violence and terror or who were eyewitnesses to them. The volume of this testimony was overwhelming, and the pattern that emerged was undeniable: union workers and especially union activists and leaders were targeted again and again in a systematic effort to silence the union and destroy its ability to negotiate for its members. In Barranquilla, the delegation heard from the son of a Coca-Cola worker Adolfo Munera, who was assassinated in August 2002. He told the delegation: My father was an honest, hard-working and friendly person. He began working at CocaCola in 1993. He joined the Coke union and began working for the rights of his coworkers. Due to that, an accusation came from the company. They [government security forces] raided the house on March 6, 1997; they came to the house, broke-in and searched the entire place. They then falsely accused my father. With the union’s help, my father got a lawyer and put up a defense. At that time, the company declared my father absent from work. During that time, my father was in exile and had to move from location to location. They fired him for being absent, at which time we asked for support. Thanks to the union who gave us that support we put up a defense. Unfortunately the company handed him a letter of termination and he then went into internal exile for five years. In August 2002 he was assassinated at the door of the house of his mother. Limberto Carranza, a Coke worker and union activist in Barranquilla, described the abduction of his 15-year old son, Jose David: I’m speaking to the international commission as the father of a son. My son was taken September 11 of last year [2003]. A couple of hooded men took him off his bicycle as he was riding home from school. They detained him and they rode him around the city of Soledad, where we resided at the time. He was beaten; that is to say, tortured. Afterwards, he was left in a drainage ditch stunned and semi-conscious. They questioned my son about me. From the moment they started hitting him, they asked him where I was and what was I involved in. Afterwards, they told him in any case they were going to kill his father. My son was beaten…to this day…he hasn’t recovered from the effects, he can’t go on. He can’t get over the psychological affects. What concerns us the most is that on the 9th we had what could be called a major battle with management when the company put forth their plan to close the plants in Cartegena, Montería and Valledupar. We organized the workers to reject the plan proposed by the company for so-called “early retirement.” They played a game of intimidation by bringing the workers to different hotels in these cities, to convince them to accept the plan and abandon their job security rights in their contracts. What was the response to our organizing? The next day they kidnapped my son. This was by no means the only incidence of violence against family members that the delegation heard about. This is perhaps the most horrifying form of terror; Cardinal Richelieu, the 17th century chief minister to Louis XIII, is said to have remarked, “a man with a family can be made 34 to do anything.” Among the other stories of threats against families was that of William Mendoza, the local president of the union in Barrancabermeja. He recounted how three men tried to kidnap his four-year old daughter on June 8, 2002, but were foiled by her mother, who held on to the child fiercely. The men then began to beat the mother, but her repeated screams attracted attention and the would-be abductors let go. After this incidence, Mendoza says a local paramilitary commander called him: He said, “listen, you were lucky today, we were going to take your kid.” He said, “we were going to kill her so that you stopped talking shit about the paramilitaries and about Coca-Cola.” This is because we here in Barranca have spoken out about the paramilitarism and their probable connections with Coca-Cola. They say if I keep talking, if I don’t silence myself, something will happen with a member of my family. I alerted the police to this and I haven’t seen even one person detained, and the police official has not talked to me about where the case is at…. My kids go to school in the armored car to protect them. This is a very difficult situation. It was not the last time that Mendoza’s family was threatened: The 17 of January of last year [2003] I received a call to my house to my daughter Paola. They asked her if her mother and father were there. They told her to tell them to be very careful. They asked her where she studied, she told them a certain school, and they told her she was lying, that they know that she went to a different school, and also that “right now your brother is doing chores right now in the front yard.” And at that moment, my ten-year old son was actually outside in the front washing the front of the house. So they were obviously staking out our house. The delegation talked to two survivors of the paramilitaries’ campaign to destroy the union in Carepa, in the Uraba region, in 1995-1996. It was here that union leader Isidro Gil was shot seven times by paramilitary gunmen inside the Coke bottling plant. Hours later, the union’s office in town was burned down. And two days after that, paramilitaries returned to the plant, lined up all the workers, presented them with prepared letters resigning their union membership, and made them sign under threat of death. The letters had been written and printed on the company’s computers. The result, not at all surprising, was that the union was destroyed, and its leaders fled in fear for their lives. Gil’s murder was one of five from the Carepa plant, along with many disappearances and kidnappings. Oscar Giraldo was at the time the vice president of the local union. Before Gil was assassinated, the union’s first executive board had been driven out of town and Giraldo’s own brother, Vincente Enrique Giraldo, had been killed. Giraldo described the complete impunity of Gil’s killers: “The police came to pick up the body and they never did any investigation. The same thing happened with my brother, they came to pick up his body and never did any, any investigation.” It was not just impunity from state prosecution that Giraldo witnessed, however. He also observed ties between the company and the paramilitaries. He told the delegation that “a supervisor told me that Mosquera [the plant’s director] was going to squash us, and three days 35 later was the assassination of Isidro Gil.” Ariosto Milan Mosquera had left town shortly before the murder, right after the union had presented its bargaining demands to the company. Recalled Giraldo: The paramilitaries could walk into the company with no problem, they would just come in and walk in, and the director kept saying that he had to get rid of the union. And he would drink with the paramilitaries and hang out with them, and everyone would tell us this. And I was told by a supervisor that the director just left to stall, and that the plan was really to get rid of the union. And I am sure that is was the paramilitaries that were told by the company to destroy the union. There was army, there was police in the town, the paramilitaries live right in the town, the police never made any attempt to stop them. And you would see the military and the paramilitary hanging out together. The paramilitaries would go around in civilian clothing with arms and they would stay in hotels. Some of them were from our own towns and some of them were from the outside. And Coca-Cola was a patron of the paramilitaries. Attacks and threats have continued. For example, Luis Eduardo Garcia and Jose Domingo Flores, union activists from Bucaramanga whom the delegation interviewed in Barrancabermeja, told the delegation that they were victims of physical attacks on September 11, 2003. Juan Carlos Galvis, the vice president of the union in Barrancabermeja, survived as assassination attempt on August 22, 2003. Coca-Cola inaction and complicity Circumstantial evidence of Coca-Cola’s complicity in the raw repression of its union workforce abounds. This consists in the suspicious coincidence, reported to the delegation by multiple union sources in Colombia, of waves of anti-union violence and contract negotiations between the union and the company. The union’s analysis also reveals that the company’s peak profits have come at times of the most intense repression. Beyond these correlations, there are troubling eyewitness accounts of paramilitaries having unrestricted access to Coke plants and of paramilitaries consorting with company managers. When the delegation traveled to Barrancabermeja, it conducted a physical assessment of access to the bottling plant there in order to understand more precisely what paramilitary access to company property entails. The plant in Barrancabermeja is surrounded by a 10-foot high iron fence. Entry is limited to a guarded gate, which remains closed. It is simply impossible to gain access to the plant without company knowledge and permission. It is impossible to avoid the conclusion that paramilitaries in Coke’s bottling plants were there with the full knowledge and/or tacit approval of the company. The delegation also heard testimony from multiple sources that there are payments made by local Coke managers to paramilitaries. In the delegation’s meeting with Coca-Cola/FEMSA representatives Juan Manuel Alvarez and Juan Carlos Dominguez on January 13, these allegations were vigorously denied. Yet, Alvarez and Dominguez acknowledged that Coke officials had never undertaken any internal or external investigations into these assertions, nor into any of the hundreds of human rights violations suffered by the company’s workers. 36 The company’s representatives also acknowledged there was a possibility that persons employed by the company—but acting without authorization—could have worked with, or have had contact with, paramilitaries. This admission makes the failure to investigate ties to the paramilitaries all the more shocking. Alvarez and Dominguez also maintained that the company assisted workers in filing complaints with the government about paramilitary harassment for union activity and promised to provide documentation thereof; to date, however, no such documentation has been received by the delegation, despite follow-up correspondence. The January 13 exchange mirrors the delegation’s experience with Coca-Cola throughout its dialogue with the company. Multiple requests for documentation have gone either unanswered or unfulfilled. Coke has shown—at best—disregard for the lives of its workers, who have been threatened, beaten, kidnapped, exiled and killed while the company has not seen fit to investigate this highly disturbing pattern affecting its workforce. Legal reprisals Suspicions that the company’s response to the plight of its workers crosses from indifference into outright intimidation is fed by Coca-Cola’s repeated resort to criminal charges against union activists. In 1996, six union members from the Bucaramanga plant were arrested after the chief of CocaCola’s security accused them of placing a bomb at the plant. Criminal charges were brought against three of them, and they were detained for over six months until the charges were dismissed as without merit by the prosecution. The delegation heard testimony from several of these workers, who recounted the ordeal of their unjust incarceration, sometimes under inhumane conditions, in horrid detail. The workers and their families were never compensated for damages suffered, and some report suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder incurred from their experience in prison. Coca-Cola has failed to condemn these workers’ imprisonment or the false charges brought against them by their own subsidiary. More recently, the company has brought criminal charges against some of the plaintiffs in the federal lawsuit filed in 2001 against the company in the Federal District Court for the Southern District of Florida under the Alien Claims Tort Act (ACTA). In the January 13 meeting in Bogota, Dominguez characterized these criminal charges as a “consequence” of the ACTA case, which the delegation interpreted to mean that the company intended the charges as a direct reprisal. Shortly after the delegation returned from Colombia, on January 26, 2004, the Colombian prosecutor involved in Coca-Cola’s case against the workers who filed the U.S. suit dismissed the charges of slander and defamation as without merit. This represents the second time Coca-Cola’s charges against its employees have been dismissed by Colombian courts. Yet Coca-Cola continues its legal strategy unabated; the company has brought similar charges against employees in Valledupar. 37 VI. CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS The delegation found both the quantity and the nature of Coca-Cola workers’ allegations shocking and compelling. It seems indisputable that Coke workers have been systematically persecuted for their union activity. It seems equally evident that the company has allowed if not itself orchestrated the human rights violations of its workers, and it has benefited economically from those violations, which have severely weakened the workers’ union and their bargaining power. In the face of this evidence, Coca-Cola’s continued insistence that it bears no responsibility whatsoever for the terror campaigns against its workers is highly disturbing, as is its complete failure to investigate company ties to the paramilitaries. The delegation has engaged in an earnest dialogue with the company on these issues for almost a year now, and has yet to receive any documentation backing up its denials of complicity in the situation. The delegation will continue to press for the specific documents it has been promised and to exhort the company to take urgently needed action to address the human rights crisis faced by its Colombian workforce. Specifically, the delegation reiterates its calls for: (1) Dropping all retaliatory criminal charges against its employees. The delegation is concerned about the chilling effects of a company such as Coca-Cola filing retaliatory charges against workers who have used the legal system to address their grievances. (2) A public statement from Coca-Cola supporting international labor rights in Colombia, denouncing anti-union violence, and initiating a long-overdue investigation of workers’ allegations. The delegation believes that Coca-Cola’s apparent refusal to investigate charges of such a serious nature against their employees appears to undermine their support for human and labor rights. Such a statement and investigation would serve to bolster international consumer confidence in the company’s corporate behavior. (3) An independent human rights commission. An independent human rights commission is necessary to evaluate all allegations and plant conditions to determine credible threats and identify potential means to protect both workers’ rights and verify Coca-Cola’s standing as a good global citizen. In order to maintain credibility and objectivity, the commission should be made up of equally participating partners from Coca-Cola, SINALTRAINAL and other relevant labor representatives and internally recognized human rights experts. The delegation will continue its efforts to persuade Coca-Cola to take these urgently needed steps and to demonstrate that it will not tolerate profits subsidized by terror. The delegation also urges all people of conscience to join in these efforts. We call on consumers to contact the company and add their voice to the call for corporate responsibility. We call on shareholders to exercise their power of ownership in the company. We call on churches, student organizations, community groups and civic associations to get involved. We issue a special call to unions to stand in solidarity with their brothers and sisters in Colombia being persecuted for their exercise of internationally recognized labor rights. And we call on government bodies, 38 representing all of these constituencies, to stand up for human rights and for the ideals of American democracy, which guarantee freedom of association. Together as stakeholders in Coca-Cola, all of us must challenge this company, the symbol of American enterprise throughout the world, to end its complicity in the persecution of Colombian workers. 39 40 41 How Credible is Coca-Cola? Beyond Coke’s Crimes in Colombia Coca-Cola’s massive human rights violations in Colombia — including the toleration and encouragement of murder, torture and kidnapping by paramilitary thugs who frequently collaborate with Coke’s bottlers — have been well documented by the Campaign to Stop Killer Coke and the International Labor Rights Fund (see www.laborrights.org). Many other aspects of Coke’s business operations around the world are receiving close scrutiny. Below is a summary of some of the abusive and criminal conduct in which Coke continues to engage. • Coke’s history of racially discriminatory practices. In November 2000, The CocaCola Co. in Atlanta paid $192.5 million to settle a highly publicized class-action lawsuit involving about 2,000 African-American employees who alleged wide disparities in pay and promotions. In terms of illustrating racial bias as corporate policy, the settlement represented just the tip of the iceberg. Many similar lawsuits are pending. Coca-Cola Enterprises Inc. (CCE), the world’s largest bottler of Coke products, is currently battling one such suit that accuses the company of “creating a hostile, intimidating, offensive and abusive workplace environment” at its Cincinnati plant. At least 500 current and former employees at the Duck Creek Rd. bottling plant in Cincinnati are involved, and this number could increase to several thousand if the court allows minorities who applied for jobs to join the class. (The Coca-Cola Co. is the largest single owner of CCE, holding about 37.5% of its stock. Three executives from The Coca-Cola Co. currently serve on the CCE board of directors: Steven Heyer, president and chief operating officer; Gary Fayard, senior vice president and chief financial officer, and Deval Patrick, executive vice president, general counsel and secretary. CCE owns 454 facilities in 46 states and employs about 74,000 people.) As reported on National Public Radio’s “All Things Considered” (6/18/02), current and former employees of the local Coca-Cola bottler in Dallas accused the company of stocking store shelves in black and Hispanic neighborhoods with expired soft drinks. (Canned soft drinks have about a nine-month shelf life before going flat.) The current and former delivery drivers said the dumping of outdated products reflected the company’s contemptuous attitude toward minorities. • Aggressive marketing to children of nutritionally worthless and damaging products. Coke paid Warner Brothers, a subsidiary of Time Warner, $150 million for exclusive global marketing rights to the Harry Potter movies, the first of which was released in November of 2001. Obviously, the whole point of Coke’s investment was to entice kids to consume more soft drinks. “It’s outrageous that Coca-Cola is using the magic of Harry Potter to lure kids to drink more (of its products)…contributing to the doubling in the percentage of obese teenagers,” said Dr. Patience White, professor -1- 42 of pediatrics at George Washington University Medical Center. What she and other critics of Coke term the childhood “obesity epidemic” in turn fuels a growing “diabetes epidemic.” • Pediatricians urge school officials and parents to eliminate or revise contracts. A new policy statement by the American Academy of Pediatrics, published in the January 2004 issue of its journal, Pediatrics, calls for the elimination of soft drink sales in schools. As the Associated Press reported (1/5/04): “While some schools rely on funds from vending machines to pay for student activities, the new policy says elementary and high schools should avoid such contracts, and those with existing contracts should impose restrictions to avoid promoting overconsumption by kids.” • Canadian school contracts under fire. In the Toronto Globe and Mail (11/27/03), columnist Margaret Wente wrote: “Step right up, boys and girls, and get your soft drinks here! We’ve got a brand-new vending machine just outside the gym. Sure, pop may rot your teeth, make you even fatter than you already are, and give you a threeespresso dose of jitters. But there’s something more important at stake here. Money! Your school is starved for cash. So now we’ve signed a swell little incentive deal with Coke. We get a whopping signing bonus for selling exclusive rights to market to our students. We keep 30% of the sales, and we even get a bonus if we meet our targets. The more pop you drink, the more money we make!” She added: “It’s likely that you’ve heard by now about the lucrative deals that Canada’s school boards are cutting with the soft-drinks industry…(and) we now know the details. Ontario’s huge Peel School Board has bagged $5.5 million to date from its 10-year contract with The Coca-Cola Bottling Co…In the U.S., by one estimate, more than 40% of all school boards have signed soft drink contracts. In Colorado, one school board administrator was so gung-ho he sent a memo warning schools that they were in danger of falling short of their consumption goals. He offered to have different electrical outlets installed so that they could add more vending machines, and he suggested that they change the rules forbidding students to consume soft drinks in class. He signed himself ‘The Coke Dude.’” British Columbia’s Education Minister, Christy Clark, told the Vancouver Sun (11/18/03) that she has been “deluged with e-mails and phone calls and people stopping me in the street to tell me they want junk food out of their kids’ schools.” Gordon Comeau, British Columbia School Trustees’ Assn. president, said local school officials, not international corporations, should make decisions about what is sold to students. “Public policy shouldn’t be made by Coca-Cola,” he said. Canada’s soft drink industry (dominated by Coca-Cola and Pepsi) was so shaken by this type of adverse publicity that the bottlers announced on Jan. 6, 2004, that they would “voluntarily” stop selling carbonated beverages in elementary and middle schools by the start of the next school year. However, the changes do not involve vending machines in high schools. • Image-enhancing partnerships (and payoffs) with U.S. dentists, National PTA. In the New York Daily News (10/26/03), columnist Lenore Skenazy told how the -2- 43 American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry (not to be confused with the American Academy of Pediatrics, cited above) happily accepted “a cool $1 million in bribe…er…grant money from Coca-Cola” and the National Parent-Teacher Assn. (PTA) unveiled a new “proud sponsor,” Coke. As Skenazy points out, the “real problem with corporate sponsorship” is not that it demands outright endorsement of unhealthy products, but that respected organizations like the pediatric dentists and the PTA are “far more likely to turn a blind eye on soda issues…if Coke was really so bad for kids, would the National PTA take its money? Would the American Academy of Pediatric Dentists? Apparently, they would. And they did.” In spite of Coke’s attempts to forge strategic alliances with respected groups, the movement against soft drinks in schools is rapidly gathering steam. California has passed a law that will soon ban junk food and soft drinks in schools entirely, and more than 20 other states are contemplating restrictions. Reuters reported (1/16/04) that the Philadelphia School District, with more than 214,000 students, voted to end the sale of carbonated soft drinks in vending machines and lunchrooms. Starting July 1, schools must sell fruit juice, water, milk and flavored milk drinks instead. • Coke admits marketing fraud, settles ‘whistleblower’ lawsuit. In June, 2003, the public got a rare glimpse of Coke’s corrupt business practices when the company acknowledged that employees manipulated the results of a marketing test of Frozen Coke at Burger King restaurants. The company thus confirmed a key accusation by Matthew Whitley, former finance director in the fountain division, who was fired in May and then sued the company for $44.4 million in damages. In two lawsuits, Whitley charged that the fountain division engaged in $2 billion in accounting fraud, created slush funds and manipulated inventories. Coke’s audit committee, which includes financier Warren Buffett and Home Depot CEO Robert Nardelli, acknowledged that some Coke employees “improperly influenced” sales results from a marketing test conducted at Burger King restaurants in Virginia. Coke also admitted that the fountain division improperly valued some equipment. As The Wall Street Journal reported in a front-page lead article (8/20/03), “Millions of dollars in sales were at stake for Coke. The company was trying to persuade Burger King to run a national promotion for its slushy dessert drink…” In admitting that Coke officials paid $10,000 to a Virginia consultant to take hundreds of children to Burger King to buy “value meals” that included a free serving of Frozen Coke, Steven Heyer, president of Coca-Cola, said: “These actions were wrong and inconsistent with the values of The Coca-Cola Co.” In August, upon learning that both the Securities and Exchange Commission and federal prosecutors were looking into Whitley’s allegations, Coke demoted Tom Moore, the president of the fountain division who was named a “co-conspirator” in one of Whitley’s lawsuits. (Moore remains with Coke in an unspecified “transitional role,” the company said.) “There was an inevitability to some kind of sacrificial lamb,” commented Marc Greenberg, a beverage analyst at Deutsche Bank. “Typically in these situations, a mishap like this results in senior management casualty.” -3- 44 In addition to issuing a public apology, Coke agreed to pay Burger King and its franchisees “up to $21 million” to patch up relations with its second largest fountain drink customer (after McDonald’s). On Oct. 7, Whitley agreed to dismiss his complaints against Coca-Cola and the individuals named in his lawsuits after the company agreed to pay him $100,000, the severance benefits to which he was entitled (approximately $140,000) and his attorney’s fees. In a joint statement, Whitley and the company promised to “continue to cooperate with the U.S. Attorney and the SEC in their respective investigations.” • Echoes of Enron. By investing almost three-quarters of the assets of its 401(k) plan in its own stock, Coke has compromised the vital interests of its own employees in the same irresponsible manner as Enron, Worldcom and other companies. According to New York Times business columnist Gretchen Morgenson (10/5/03), Coke’s 401(k) holders lost more than $71 million in 2002. In her front-page column, entitled “Lopsided 401(k)’s, All Too Common,” Morgenson bemoans the fact that “some companies force their own stock on employees by using the shares, as Coke does, to match workers’ contributions to a 401(k) or by requiring workers to hold company shares until they reach a certain age.” It is well to remember that 70% of Coca-Cola’s revenue already comes from markets outside the U.S. Because of declining soft-drink sales in North America and Coke’s spotty overall financial picture, many U.S. workers have lost their jobs or suffered needless anxiety over retirement planning. Three years ago, for example, Coke laid off 6,000 employees while providing former CEO Douglas Ivester with a $17 million golden parachute. In 2001, current CEO Douglas Daft’s compensation totaled $105,186,544., including stock option grants, according to the AFL-CIO’s PayWatch website. • Shortchanging U.S. employees. Under a May 2002 agreement with the U.S. Dept. of Labor’s Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, Coke agreed to pay $8.l million in back compensation to more than 2,000 current and former employees. The federal agency’s and Coke’s own internal reviews revealed large salary discrepancies from Dec. 31, 1998 through Dec. 15, 2000. • Safety and health problems in U.S. plants. On June 19, 2001, Eric Meissner, a 30year employee at the Auburndale, Florida plant that produces Coke’s Minute Maid and Hi-C products, was fired after alerting a U.S. Agriculture Dept. inspector about a dead rat found under an orange juice capping machine. The president of Meissner’s Teamsters local commented, “(Coke) would rather fire a worker with 30 years experience than address serious product safety concerns.” Since 1996, when Coke brought in Cutrale Citrus Juices USA, a subsidiary of a Brazilian company, to produce juice products in Florida, there have been frequent reports of rats, pigeon feathers and droppings found on conveyor belts, roaches swarming juice feed tanks, and mold growing inside production lines that aren’t shut down for regular cleanings. Conditions were so bad by January 2000 that workers -4- 45 struck to protest unsafe conditions. Inspectors from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) found 15 violations, including 13 that were considered “serious,” in 1999 and 2000. There were two major chemical leaks which caused plant evacuations, numerous complaints of air pollution and one worker killed on the job in an electrical accident. Coke’s overall record on safety, as monitored by OSHA, is both less than admirable and worse than many of its competitors (such as Pepsi). In an article headlined “OSHA Cites Coke for 222 Violations,” the Atlanta Business Chronicle (4/14/03) provided details. For example, in 2002 “The Coca-Cola Co. and its network of bottlers were cited for 222 violations of federal OSHA standards and fined $156,831. In 2001, OSHA cited Coke and its bottlers for 212 violations and fined them a total of $170,091. Over the past decade, the companies have been cited for 2,264 violations.” In February 2003, OSHA identified 14,200 U.S. facilities (workplaces) that had accident and illness rates at twice the national average of about three illnesses or injuries for every 100 workers. Ninety-six of these workplaces were owned by Coke bottlers. (To read the entire article, go to http://www.bizjournals.com.) • Overexploitation and pollution of water sources in India. Of the 200 countries where Coca-Cola is sold, India reportedly has the fastest-growing market, but the adverse environmental impacts of its operations there have subjected the parent company and its local bottlers to a firestorm of criticism and protest. There has been a growing outcry against Coca-Cola’s production practices in India, which are draining out vast amounts of public groundwater and turning farming communities into virtual deserts. The company was a major target of protesters and the subject of much discussion among the nearly 100,000 people from 100 countries who gathered at the January 2004 World Social Forum in Mumbai (Bombay), India. Coca-Cola and Pepsi products were barred from the refreshment stands at the six-day conference, timed to run concurrently with the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, an annual meeting of pro-business politicians and executives. On Jan. 18, 2004, more than 500 protesters, including about 150 residents who live near Coke’s bottling facilities in India, marched and rallied to condemn the company. According to Amit Srivastava of the organization Global Resistance, “Three communities in India — Plachimada in Kerala, Wada in Maharashtra and Mehdiganj in Uttar Pradesh — are experiencing severe water shortages as a result of Coca-Cola’s mining of the majority of the common groundwater resources around its facilities. Coke’s indiscriminate dumping of waste water into the ground has polluted the scarce water that remains. In Sivagangai, Tamil Nadu, residents are opposing a proposed Coca-Cola facility because of fears that they too will face water shortages and pollution.” “The Indian Parliament has banned the sale of Coke and Pepsi products in its cafeteria,” Srivastava added. “The parliamentarians should take the next logical step, and ban the sale of Coke and Pepsi products in the entire country.” He said the ban -5- 46 came as a result of tests by the Indian government and private laboratories which found high concentrations of pesticides and insecticides in the colas, making them unfit for consumption. “Some samples tested showed the presence of these toxins to be more than 30 times the standard allowed by the European Union. Tests of samples taken from the U.S. of the same drinks were found to be safe,” he said. Coca-Cola India has hired a public relations firm, Perfect Relations, to rebuild its tarnished image. To add insult to injury, the scarce water than remains in the Indian communities has become so polluted that Coke, in a “gesture of goodwill,” now trucks in water tankers for local residents. Coke is also giving away the toxic sludge from its plant in Kerala to farmers — as fertilizer! Tests on samples of the toxic sludge commissioned by the British Broadcasting Co. found high levels of lead and cadmium. Meanwhile, letters or e-mails to Coke on this issue invariably yield form letters that smear Indian protesters as “a handful of extremists.” Coca-Cola, along with the Indian government, seems to believe that the use of force will make the problem go away. On Aug. 30, 2003, 13 activists were arrested in Kerala during a peaceful demonstration and a leader of the movement was severely beaten by police. On Sept. 11, armed security forces violently attacked a peaceful demonstration of more than 1,000 community members in Mehdiganj. As a follow-up to the World Social Forum, nearly 5,000 environmental activists were expected to attend the Jan. 21-23 World Water Conference in Plachimada, a village north of Cochin, Kerala state’s business hub. In December, the top court in Kerala ordered a Coca-Cola plant to stop using local groundwater and arrange to get water through other sources. The court also blocked the village council from shutting down the Coke plant. The conference is intended to “redefine the poor people’s fight for water for survival in India and the world,” environmentalist Vandana Shiva told the Associated Press (1/19/04). “We will discuss the privatization of water, climatic changes and environment, corporate control of water and dam implementation in India.” More background information on Coca-Cola and the environmental destruction it has wrought in India is posted and updated frequently at www.IndiaResource.org. • Repressive, anti-worker policies in many foreign countries. Coke’s reputation has already suffered because of the actions of its subsidiaries and/or bottlers in Brazil, Guatemala, Zimbabwe, the Philippines and elsewhere. (According to reports that seem to echo the horror stories from Colombia, Coke was misbehaving on a massive scale in Guatemala in the 1970s and 1980s. Several leaders of a Guatemalan union were murdered, and thousands of protesters throughout Latin America ripped down billboards and, by changing one word, made them read: “Coca-Cola: The Sparkle of Death.” Many aspects of Coca-Cola’s rampant callousness and greed in the international marketplace are documented in “For God, Country & Coca-Cola” by Mark Pendergrast and other books.) -6- 47 • Inaction and neglect on health issues in Africa. Health care advocates around the world have demanded that employees of Coke bottlers in Africa be provided with access to care and medicine that would treat, or prevent the further spread of, HIV/AIDS. Although Coca-Cola, the largest private-sector employer on the African continent, has been barely addressing the problem, its public relations juggernaut puts forth the lie that the company has all but solved it. An Oct. 27, 2003 press release from the organization Health GAP (www.healthgap.org) is headlined: “Coke’s HIV/AIDS Treatment Program in Africa Still Just a Public Relations Ploy.” • Anti-competitive practices around the world. Coke frequently gets in trouble because of its trade practices and attempts to monopolize the beverage sector in many countries, but Mexico — the home base of its huge Latin American distribution nexus — is probably the most significant case. Coke controls more than two-thirds of the soft drink market in Mexico, where the Federal Competition Commission found in March 2002 that Coke and 89 of its bottlers were guilty of engaging in anticompetitive practices (such as entering into exclusive agreements with small convenience stores and grocery stores). In Costa Rica, an anti-trust commission is investigating whether Coke and Panamerican Beverages sought to squeeze out competition through similar exclusive agreements with retailers. Anti-competitive practices and environmental destruction often go hand-in-hand, as in Panama, where Coke’s bottling partner, Coca-Cola de Panama, was fined $300,000 in May 2003 for polluting the Matasnillo River. • Boardroom interlocks and influences. Some of the same individuals who serve as Coke’s top policymakers also set policies for such multinational companies as ChevronTexaco, International Paper, General Electric, Reebok International, BristolMyers Squibb, AT&T, Dow Chemical and IBM. Each of these companies has its own well-documented record of irresponsible behavior and/or hostility toward human rights and labor and environmental concerns here and abroad. Does this sound like a responsible corporation? Prepared by: Campaign to Stop Killer Coke (www.killercoke.org)/Corporate Campaign, Inc. (www.corporatecampaign.org) Campaign to Stop Killer Coke: (212) 979-8320; stopkillercoke@aol.com -7- United Students Against Sweatshops Statement, 4/15 48 Cal-Safety Compliance Corporation is Not a Credible Monitor for Coca-Cola’s Labor Practices The Coca-Cola Company has recently released a report by the for-profit corporation Cal-Safety Compliance Corporation as an “independent investigation” of Coca-Cola’s labor practices in Colombia. This is a purely public relations move that is due to increasing student pressure on campuses throughout the nation. We want to make clear that we view this development as entirely unacceptable and unviable as a means of moving forward the process of ensuring that workers’ rights are respected in Coca-Cola bottling facilities in Colombia. Cal-Safety is not regarded as a credible monitoring organization within the mainstream worker rights advocate community as result of its track record of missing egregious violations in high profile cases and its flawed monitoring methodology. This investigation by Cal-Safety funded by Coca-Cola will not be taken seriously by the anti-sweatshop movement and does not put to rest our long standing concern about human rights abuses in Coca-Cola’s plants in Colombia. The document provides some background that informs our view of Cal-Safety and why the company cannot be relied upon to find, report, and correct worker rights violations in this case. Cal-Safety and the Case of El Monte Cal-Safety is perhaps best known among worker advocates for its role in the case of El Monte, the most infamous incident of sweatshop abuse in modern American history. In this case, 75 women 5 men were kept in conditions resembling slavery in a factory compound located in El Monte, California. For up to five years, the workers were forbidden to leave the compound, forced to work behind razor wire and armed watch, sewing garments for top American brands for less than a dollar an hour. The workers worked from 7:00 am until midnight, seven days a week. Eight to ten people were forced to live in rat infested rooms designed for two. 1 Cal-Safety was the registered monitor for the front shop, D&R. D&R transferred hundreds of bundles of cut cloth to the slave sweatshop and delivered thousands of finished garments to manufacturers and retailers each day, yet there were fewer than a dozen sewing machines at the D&R facility. Cal-Safety's inspection of the facility failed to uncover anything unusual, including the large volume of work being sent out to the slave sweatshop. In addition, Cal-Safety even failed to identify the numerous wage and hour violations of the 22 Latino workers employed by the D&R facility. 2 The revelations of abuse at the El Monte factory was a major event in American labor history, helping to spark the modern anti-sweatshop movement. The failure of Cal-Safety to find abuses in this case is one of the most widely cited examples of the shortcomings of the private monitoring industry. 1 For a detailed account of the El Monte case, see Robert Ross et al. 1997. No Sweat: Fashion, Free Trade and the Rights of Garment Workers. 2 Hearing before the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations of the Committee of Education and the Workforce, California House of Representatives, May 18, 1998. Statement of Julie A. Su, Attorney, Asian Pacific Legal Center 49 Additional Incidents of Ineffective Monitoring by Cal-Safety As a result of its failure to identify violations in the El Monte case, Cal-Safety was the subject of extensive public criticism. However, even with this criticism, Cal-Safety’s auditing practices continued to be exposed as inadequate. The following are additional high profile cases in which Cal-Safety failed to find and/or report worker rights violations. In 1998, Cal-Safety gave Trinity Knitworks, a garment factory in Los Angeles, a clean report despite the fact that the factory failed to provide complete records and had failed to pay employees for months. Cal-Safety reported to Disney, its client in this case, that Trinity was fully compliant with labor standards at nearly the same moment that investigators of the California Department of Labor were investigating the factory and citing it with massive minimum wage violations, including $213,000 in back wages owed to some 142 workers. 3 In September, 1998, when the Department of Labor seized 17,000 Disney garments from Trinity, the factory’s checks to workers had been bouncing for five months. Cal-Safety had visited the factory during this period. A December 1, 1998 Los Angeles Times article reported that “as representatives of Disney and the other firms kept close watch over production details, such as the placement of inseams, hemlines and zippers, monitors hired by the companies failed to notice Trinity workers were not being paid.” The article goes on to quote Joe A. Razo, California's deputy labor commissioner, who said, "You'd have to be pretty blind not to know what was happening at Trinity”. 4 In 1999, Cal-Safety was the monitor hired by John Paul Richard, a high-end garment manufacturer producing in Los Angeles. Cal-Safety failed to identify and report sweatshop conditions, including falsified time records, off-the-clock work and subminimum wages. In fact, following a visit from a Cal-Safety inspector, two Latino garment workers who had spoken to Cal-Safety were fired in the presence of factory managers. When Cal-Safety was contacted about this act of retaliation for cooperating with a monitor, Cal-Safety refused to do anything, insisting that it wasn’t Cal-Safety’s problem. After the workers filed a federal lawsuit against the manufacturers and retailers in that case, formal discovery of Cal-Safety revealed a thoroughly inadequate process for training, inspecting and reporting. 5 In 1999, Cal-Safety was hired by Wal-Mart to audit a factory in China called Chun Si which produced handbags for Wal-Mart’s Kathy Lee Gifford line. As revealed in a lengthy expose by Business Week, the factory kept workers in virtual captivity, locked in the walled in compound for twenty three hours a day. Management confiscated workers’ identify guards, placing them in danger of deportation if they left the factory. Factory guards routinely beat workers for talking back to managers or walking too slow. Workers were fined as much as one dollar for infractions as minor as spending too long in the restroom. Cal-Safety, along with Price Waterhouse Coopers, audited the factory five times. Business Week reported that, while Cal- 3 Patrick McDonnell, Los Angeles Times December 1, 1998. “Industry Woes Help Bury Respected Garment Maker” 4 Ibid. 5 Asian Pacific American Legal Center. September 20, 2000. “Settlement Reached With Major L.A. Garment Manufacturers Who Ignored Reports of Sweatshop Labor” Safety’s audits found some of the less serious violations regarding unpaid and excessive overtime, Cal-Safety’s “audits missed the most serious abuses… including beatings and confiscated identity papers”. 6 Cal-Safety’s Flawed Monitoring Methodology Information about the above examples of Cal Safety’s monitoring track record is complemented by the results of a thorough investigation into Cal Safety’s monitoring methodology by Dr. Jill Esbenshade, presented in the recently released book Monitoring Sweatshops. In her research, Esbenshade conducted extensive interviews with CalSafety auditors and directly observed the company’s labor auditing in practice. Given the problematic practices documented, Cal-Safcty’s poor track record is perhaps not surprising. In numerous key areas, Cal Safety failed to adhere to minimum accepted standards for competent factory investigation. • Unannounced factory visits have been shown to be substantially more effective in identifying worker rights violations, because they deny management the opportunity to hide abuses. Yet the majority of Cal-Safety’s factory audits are announced, meaning that factory management has full knowledge that the auditors will be visiting the factory on the appointed date and time. 7 • The process of identifying, documenting, reporting, and correcting worker rights abuses is a difficult and labor intensive process. Department of Labor investigations take roughly 20 hours to complete. WRC investigations often take hundreds of person hours over a period of months. However, Cal-Safety purports to accomplish the same work in just a few hours. Cal-Safety factory audits are generally scheduled every three hours, including time to commute to a new site or take a lunch or rest break, meaning that audits frequently take substantially less than three hours. 8 • It is well established that interviewing workers outside of the factory in locations workers choose is far more effective in getting candid information about working conditions than interviewing workers inside of the factory where managers know who is being interviewed and workers can become the subjects of reprisal and retaliation. Yet, according to Cal-Safety auditors, Cal-Safety primarily conducts worker interviews on the factory floor or in an office in the factory. A former Cal-Safety monitor said, “There is no privacy in the conversation. The employer knew who was being interviewed.” 9 • The key area of concern in Coca-Cola’s bottling facilities is freedom of association and the right of workers to unionize and bargain collectively, and thus expertise in this area is critical to an effective investigation. Yet Cal-Safety does not consider collective bargaining rights or freedom of association to be within the purview of its audits in the United States, and does not investigate for violations of the National Labor Relations Act. At the Cal-Safety office, researchers noticed anti-union 6 Business Week, Business News 2 October 2000. “Inside a Chinese Sweatshop: "A Life of Fines and Beating" 7 Esbenshade, Jill. 2004. Monitoring Sweatshops: Workers, Consumers, and the Global Apparel Industry. pg 73 8 Ibid. pg 72 9 Ibid. pg 77 50 propaganda posted on the wall voicing the message that monitoring is a substitute for unionization. 10 No evidence could be found indicating that Cal-Safety has experience or expertise investigating violations of associational rights overseas. • A basic principle of credible monitoring is that organizations that are beholden to the industry they monitor as their principle source of income are not likely to produce reports that are entirely unbiased or critical of their paymaster. However, Cal-Safety has been contracted and paid directly by many of the world’s largest corporations, including Wal-Mart, Walt Disney, the Gap, and Nike. 11 Cal-Safety’s annual revenue through private for-profit monitoring is in the millions of dollars. 12 Corporate contracts are its principle source of income. • A basic principle of the University’s anti-sweatshop policy is transparency and the public disclosure of factory information – a practice to which Cal-Safety has never submitted itself. Cal-Safety does not publicly disclose its monitoring reports to the public or to the workers whom the audits are supposedly designed to benefit. Even the names and locations of factories are a strictly held secret. Indeed, Cal-Safety’s website states, “CSCC considers all of its monitoring interactions to be extremely confidential; inspection data is strictly controlled and released only to the client of record.” 13 Conclusion In sum, based upon the information available, there are is ample grounds to conclude the Cal-Safety is unfit to monitor Coca-Cola’s labor practices in Colombia. Indeed, given its repeated failure to find egregious violations in high profile cases of worker abuse, its status as a for-profit corporation, its practice of monitoring generating revenue from the major corporations for whom it monitors, its lack of experience with the core issue of freedom of association, its flawed methodology in visiting factories and conducting worker interviews, and its utter lack of transparency, Cal-Safety should easily be ruled out as a candidate for credibly investigating the case of Coca-Cola in Colombia. We expect that if Cal-Safety does conduct a paid audit of Coca-Cola’s practices, the most likely outcome will be that it finds minor violations – sufficient to slap Coca-Cola on the wrist – but fails to adequately investigate and report on the serious violations, involving violence and the threat of violence against trade unionists, that have prompted worldwide concern. The University should not lend its credibility or place any credence in this transparent effort to whitewash a serious case of human rights abuse. 10 Ibid. pg 81 Source: National Labor Committee 12 Esbenshade, Jill. 2004. Monitoring Sweatshops: Workers, Consumers, and the Global Apparel Industry. pg 65 13 From Cal-Safety’s website: http://www.cscc-online.com/faqs/container_faqs.shtml# 11 51 52 News Release from Campaign to Stop Killer Coke April 17, 2006 For further information, contact: Pat Clark or Ray Rogers Campaign to Stop Killer Coke (718) 852-2808 University of Michigan Falls Prey to Another Coca-Cola PR Scam The University of Michigan, New York University and several other institutions in the U.S., Canada and Europe have recently severed relationships with The Coca-Cola Company because Coca-Cola would not agree to an independent third party investigation of allegations of human rights, labor and environmental abuses by its bottlers in Colombia and India. On April 10, Coke informed Tim Slottow, Executive Vice President and CFO of the University of Michigan, that independent investigations would take place in Colombia and India. According to Coca-Cola, the United Nations International Labor Organization (ILO) has agreed to do an “investigation and evaluation” in Colombia and The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) was developing an “impartial independent third party assessment of water resource management practices at Coca-Cola facilities in India…” The University of Michigan, apparently without even checking Coke’s claims, immediately issued a statement that said it would resume purchases of Coca-Cola products that was suspended in January. The decision was made by Mr. Slottow without any consultation with students or the University’s Dispute Review Board (DRB). “Mr. Slottow has done a real disservice to students and the entire University of Michigan community, as well as to workers and communities in Colombia and India,” said Ray Rogers, director of the Campaign to Stop Killer Coke. “He and his advisors have foolishly failed to check out Coke’s claims or the close relationships that already exist between Coke and its so-called ‘third party investigators’.” ILO, Coca-Cola and Colombia First, regarding the Colombia situation: In a letter to Mr. Slottow on April 10, Coca-Cola North America President Donald Knauss wrote: “On March 2nd, the International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers’ Associations (IUF) announced that it requested the International Labor Organization (ILO) to investigate and evaluate past and present labor relations and workers’ rights practices of the Coca-Cola bottling operations in Colombia…” Since the Campaign to Stop Killer Coke began in 2003, the IUF has opposed efforts by students on behalf of SINALTRAINAL, the non-IUF union representing most unionized Coke workers in Colombia, to ban Coke products from their campuses and student unions. The only union in Colombia affiliated with the IUF that represents Coke workers is SICO, a company union with 40 to 50 Coke workers. SICO replaced SINALTRAINAL after SINALTRAINAL’s union officer Isidro Gil was assassinated by paramilitaries inside the Carepa Coca-Cola bottling plant and his local union was crushed. (See “Why Does the IUF Attack SINALTRAINAL?”) In the April 10 letter, Mr. Knauss also wrote: “Questions concerning the ILO investigation and evaluation should be directed to Ms. Sally Paxton, Executive Director, Social Dialogue.” In an April 12 phone conversation with Ray Rogers, Ms. Paxton contradicted at least two crucial points in Mr. Knauss’s letter. First, she emphasized that the ILO would only do an “assessment of current working conditions,” not of past labor relations practices. Second, she insisted that 53 the ILO was not going to conduct “an investigation,” adding that there won’t even be an assessment of the parent company Coca-Cola, only an “assessment” of the enterprises in Colombia. When asked who would fund the “assessment,” Ms. Paxton responded, “The money will come from outside donors or the regular budget. That has not yet been decided.” Ms. Paxton said that the model developed for Better Factories Cambodia, a project of the ILO, would be used in the Colombia “assessment.” According to the ILO website, “Better Factories Cambodia aims to improve working conditions in Cambodia’s export garment factories. It combines independent monitoring with finding solutions, through suggestions to management, training, advice and information.” The ILO website adds that the outside donors for the Cambodian project included the Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia, whose council is entirely composed of executives from the Cambodian garment industry. Does this mean that the ILO will seek or accept funding from the American Beverage Assn., whose board includes Donald Knauss himself and other Coke executives? The ILO has a tripartite structure, consisting of 28 representatives of governments, 14 representatives of employers and 14 representatives of labor. Labor observers and advocates who are familiar with the ILO say that the organization is heavily skewed against workers, since most government representatives align themselves with the employer representatives. Imagine if this multinational body was simply a U.S. body. What chance would workers have to advance any part of their agenda? Because of the stranglehold over the Congress that corporate lobbyists enjoy, U.S. labor can’t even get legislation enacted to protect workers’ basic rights. Why is Coca-Cola so comfortable with Ms. Paxton overseeing this so-called “investigation and evaluation”? “Ms. Paxton was a partner in private practice at Fulbright and Jaworski, concentrating in civil litigation at both the trial and appellate levels in a variety of subjects, including labor and employment law,” according to her biography on the ILO’s site. The Fulbright & Jaworski website states that the firm “represents companies in lawsuits involving disputes under collective bargaining agreements” and “defends employers before the National Labor Relations Board” — not quite the resume of an impartial juror or an unbiased administrator. The law firm has represented ExxonMobil, Duke Energy, Merck & Co and other companies with questionable records on matters involving ethics, exploitation and/or environmental concerns. Coke’s Edward Potter and the ILO Edward E. Potter, Coca-Cola’s Director of Global Labor Relations and Workplace Accountability, serves on the Applications of Conventions Committee within the International Labor Organization. He is currently the head spokesperson for the entire Employers’ Group, a powerful position within the ILO structure to promote the interests of big business and thus the interests of Coca-Cola. In addition, Potter leads the U.S. employer delegation to the ILO’s annual conference that is coordinated through the United States Council for International Business, which is on the ILO’s governing body. Over the past year, Potter has demanded that any evidence uncovered by an investigation of Coca-Cola and its Colombian bottlers that indicated Coke committed labor or human rights abuses could not be used in the lawsuit filed by the International Labor Rights Fund (ILRF) and the United Steelworkers on behalf of SINALTRAINAL, several of its members and the survivors of Isidro Gil, one of its murdered officers. ILRF Executive Director Terry Collingsworth 54 responded to Mr. Potter’s demand in a November 14 letter: “We cannot prejudice our clients by agreeing to bury evidence that would support their claims,” he said. During the process of seeking an independent investigation of Coke’s practices, students asserted: “The investigation in Colombia must include both CURRENT and PAST issues: issues relating to the present lawsuit MAY NOT BE EXCLUDED from the investigation — as these are some of the most egregious violations of our codes and also some of the most contentious issues in this case. This includes issues such as the murders, torture and kidnapping of union workers.” Mr. Potter insisted that there be no investigation of past abuses. The proposed ILO assessment of current conditions — not an “investigation,” as explained by Sally Paxton — is exactly what Mr. Potter and Coca-Cola have wanted all along: a blatantly biased evaluation that will ignore past abuses and will not hold the company accountable in any meaningful way. Because of Coke’s partnerships and financial relationships with the United Nations, as well as the above-mentioned conflicts of interest, no arm of the UN can be considered an impartial, independent investigator or evaluator of Coca-Cola’s labor relations and labor rights practices. Coca-Cola’s scheme for worldwide growth specifically includes partnerships with the United Nations. For example, the company touts its $1.5 million fund to support up to 100 projects over five years. The projects involve education, the environment, culture/arts and sports, but essentially serve as vehicles to promote the Coca-Cola brand name and its beverages to young people, the primary target group for Coke’s marketing. These projects include youth activities, such as the national youth day in Turkey and a large music festival called Rock 'n Coke. In another UN-related public relations scam, Coca-Cola announced in mid-March that it had signed on to the UN Global Compact, which has been described by its senior officer, Gavin Power, as “a voluntary initiative to promote and advance a principles-based approach to corporate responsibility.” Mr. Power added: “It is not a regulatory body nor monitoring instrument… The Global Compact is not a club for ‘perfect companies,’ if such organizations even exist. It is a platform for companies to work on universal principles and related challenging issues and improve their performance over time.” “The Global Compact is another public relations vehicle for imperfect companies,” said Ray Rogers. “Nothing is expected of them nor do they expect to do anything to become perfect or even respectable.” TERI, Coca-Cola and India Regarding the situation in India, Coca-Cola North America President Donald Knauss’s April 10 letter to the University of Michigan’s Mr. Slottow stated: “We are in active dialogue with TERI, a highly respected Delhi-based NGO with deep experience on sustainability issues to develop a transparent and impartial independent third party assessment of water resource management practices at Coca-Cola company facilities in India…” One day later, Mr. Slottow wrote to Donald Knauss: “…(We) are supportive of your work with The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI), a highly respected nonprofit organization with more than 30 years of experience and leadership on sustainability issues, to develop a transparent and independent third party assessment of water resource management practice at Coca-Cola bottling plants in India…” 55 How could the University of Michigan be duped into believing that TERI could develop an impartial independent third party assessment? Consider the facts: 1. Coca-Cola India Ltd. is listed by TERI on its website as a corporate sponsor; 2. TERI Governing Council member Deepak S. Parekh is on the Advisory Board of Coca-Cola India; 3. At least two current projects of TERI are sponsored by Coca-Cola India Ltd.; • GIS-based diagnostic study for assessing availability and quality of water resources to address community concerns using a watershed approach — Sponsor(s): Coca-Cola India Limited — Start date: January 2006 • Mobilizing youth for water conservation (MY WATER) — Sponsor(s): Coca-Cola India Limited — Start date: April 2005 Furthermore, the Coca-Cola Co. is publishing misleading articles and advertisements and making misleading presentations to college audiences, claiming: 1. “For the third consecutive year, we were presented the prestigious Golden Peacock Environment Management Award for environmental practices.” (Director of Global Labor Relations and Workplace Accountability Edward E. Potter, Business Today, Spring 2006) Mr. Potter neglects to mention that the award is given by the Institute of Directors and the World Environmental Foundation. Sanjiv Gupta, President and CEO of Coca-Cola India sits on the Executive Council of the Institute of Directors. The World Environmental Foundation is sponsored by Coca-Cola, as the group’s website makes clear. 2. That the Coca-Cola India plant in Kaladrea won the “Innovative Project Award” from the Confederation of Indian Industry for its contribution towards reduction in specific water consumption. Here Coca-Cola fails to disclose the fact that Tarun Das, Director-General of the Confederation of Indian Industry, serves on the International Advisory Council of The Coca-Cola Company. 3. That Coca-Cola India received recognition from the Indian Red Cross for its environmental programs. But we ask: Could that award have anything to do with the fact that Coca-Cola pledged $10 million to international and local relief agencies, including the International Red Cross, after the tsunami disaster? “This latest attempt by Coca-Cola to mislead the media, campus administrators and the public is just another example of how the company announces deceptive initiatives just prior to its annual shareholders’ meetings,” said Rogers. “Last year, it was the Cal Safety Compliance Corporation’s 56 bogus report clearing Coke of wrongdoing in Colombia, a report commissioned and paid for by Coke. The Los Angeles Times, Business Week and other major media exposed Cal Safety’s lack of credibility and the fact that it overlooked the most egregious violations in several high-profile cases of human rights and labor abuses.” A thorough investigation into Cal Safety's monitoring methodology by Dr. Jill Esbenshade, author of "Monitoring Sweatshops," revealed that the company consistently failed to adhere to minimum accepted standards for competent factory investigations. “This year’s attempt by Coca-Cola to mislead the public is equally self-serving and deceptive,” Rogers concluded. “If Mr. Slottow’s decision is allowed to stand, the University of Michigan’s reputation for high ethical standards and careful consideration of moral and ethical questions will have been compromised beyond any hope of repair. Killer Coke vs. The Truth: 57 A Response to Denials and Distortions The Coca-Cola Co. is sending form-letter responses to all those who write to complain about its human rights abuses, its failure to provide safe workplaces and its collaboration with paramilitary terrorists who seek to destroy the SINALTRAINAL union in Colombia. The Campaign to Stop Killer Coke offers the following responses to Coke’s assertions. Denial No. 1: Coca-Cola claims that “SINALTRAINAL’s oft-repeated allegations against the Coca-Cola Company and its Colombian bottling partners are completely false. They are nothing more than a shameless effort to generate publicity using the name of our Company, its trademark and brands.” The Truth: It’s simply preposterous to say that Colombian workers and their union are suing Coca-Cola in order to “generate publicity.” Indeed, by seeking legal redress these Colombians are risking their lives and livelihoods. Coca-Cola’s bottling partner, Panamco Colombia, has responded to SINALTRAINAL by bringing criminal charges against all the Colombian plaintiffs — with the acquiescence, if not the overt support, of The Coca-Cola Company. In addition, the plaintiffs have been subjected to repeated threats. In August 2003, Juan Carlos Galvis, a worker and union activist at the Barrancabermeja bottling plant, narrowly escaped an assassination attempt after paramilitaries fired their weapons at him in an attempt to retaliate for his involvement in the lawsuit and the international campaign against Coke’s workplace abuses. Why would Galvis and the other plaintiffs risk their lives merely to seek “publicity?” Curiously, while Coca-Cola flatly denies all the allegations in the lawsuit, it never even addresses the specific facts that are cited therein. For example, no one disputes the fact that union leader Isidro Segundo Gil was murdered in cold blood while working at the Carepa bottling plant. Nor does anyone dispute the fact that the same paramilitaries who killed Gil returned the next day and tried to force all of the workers to sign union resignation forms prepared by CocaCola’s managers. It is also public record that three of the Colombian plaintiffs, as alleged in the International Labor Rights Fund lawsuit, were thrown in jail for six months and subjected to inhumane and brutal prison conditions, based upon false charges initiated by Coca-Cola’s bottling partner, Panamco Colombia. A Colombian prosecutor later dismissed these charges as frivolous, while suggesting they were brought in order to discredit and undermine the union. Yet, to this day, Coca-Cola and its “bottling partners” continue to press baseless criminal charges against the Colombian plaintiffs in retaliation for their lawsuit. Denial No. 2: Coca-Cola claims that “the U.S. District Court in Miami dismissed The Coca-Cola Company from lawsuits filed by SINALTRAINAL, finding that the plaintiffs failed to offer any factual or legal basis to support their claims that the Company was responsible for wrongful conduct in Colombia.” The Truth: While the District Court on March 31, 2003 did dismiss Coca-Cola from the lawsuit, it did so (1) prior to discovery and the accompanying ability of both sides to garner and present evidence; and (2) on the basis of a single document — a “sample” bottlers’ agreement -1- that Coca-Cola admitted wasn’t the actual agreement with the Colombian bottlers cited in the lawsuit. 58 The court found, we believe prematurely and in error, that Coca-Cola did not have sufficient control of the Colombian bottlers to be held liable for their human rights abuses — in spite of the fact that Coca-Cola was the largest shareholder in Panamco and owned 25% of its outstanding Class A shares, 25% of its Class B shares and 100% of its outstanding Series C Preferred Stock. Panamco’s “Definitive Proxy Statement” on its impending merger with Mexican-based Coca-Cola FEMSA, filed on March 28, 2003, stated: “The Coca-Cola Company has the right to prevent any merger transaction involving Panamco, by virtue of its ownership of Panamco’s Series C Preferred Stock…” Six top executives and a former consultant at Coca-Cola, a Coca-Cola board member and a chief policymaker for SunTrust Banks (the institution that has been Coca-Cola’s financial bulwark since 1919) now sit on FEMSA’s board, and Coca-Cola owns 46.4% of FEMSA’s voting stock. The District Court also failed to take into account documents admittedly created by CocaCola (i.e., letters to consumers and a statement to shareholders) in which the company frankly acknowledged its control over workplace practices and its right to inspect the plants to ensure that local managers abide by human rights conventions and domestic law. The plaintiffs intend to appeal the dismissal of the company. However, the court’s technical ruling on Coca-Cola’s ability to be liable for human rights abuses in Colombia does not change the fact that these abuses actually occurred. Indeed, the plaintiffs continue to pursue these claims. Coca-Cola chooses to ignore the fact that the court did allow the lawsuit to proceed against both Panamco Colombia (now merged into Coca-Cola FEMSA) and Bebidas y Alimentos, the operator of the plant in which Isidro Gil was murdered. The court acknowledged that the plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged that these bottlers engaged in the same type of serious human rights abuses (as defined under international law, or “the law of nations,” to include extrajudicial killings, torture and unlawful detention) that the Alien Tort Claims Act of 1789 and the Torture Victims Protection Act of 1992 are intended to correct. Denial No. 3: Coca-Cola claims that “a court in Colombia, the Colombian Attorney General, and two other major labor unions have all indicated that there is no evidence supporting allegations made by SINALTRAINAL against our Colombian bottlers.” The Truth: No court in Colombia has ever ruled on the human rights claims being brought against Coca-Cola. And, while it is true that the criminal charges against the Coca-Cola bottler in Carepa were ultimately dismissed before they got to court (after initially being found meritorious by a Colombian prosecutor), these charges were ultimately dismissed based upon the fact that the plant manager in Carepa, Ariosta Mosquera, who allegedly conspired with the paramilitaries to murder Isidro Gil, left town shortly before the actual murder. Yet, the same dismissal decision notes that Mosquera, as the family of Isidro Gil claimed, fraternized openly with the paramilitaries and had threatened union workers prior to the murder. We believe that Mosquera’s hasty departure before the murder is actually evidence of his guilt, not his innocence. U.S. State Dept. human rights reports say that only a handful of the thousands of murders of Colombian trade unionists in recent years have ever resulted in successful prosecutions. “Cases where the instigators and perpetrators of the murders of trade union leaders are identified are practically nonexistent, as is the handing down of guilty verdicts,” the State Dept. asserts. In -2- light of this, it is not surprising that the plaintiffs cannot secure justice through the Colombian courts. That’s why they are seeking redress through the U.S. courts in the first place. 59 And, while there are a couple of unions (most notably the one which took over at the Carepa plant after SINALTRAINAL was wiped out by the paramilitaries there) which, for their own reasons, are not in support of the campaign against Coca-Cola, SINALTRAINAL has earned the active support of the largest union federation in Colombia, the CUT (Unitary Workers Federation), and Colombia's National Labor School, which the U.S. State Dept. relies upon for data about Colombian union matters. In the United States, the AFL-CIO, the United Steelworkers of America, the International Labor Rights Fund, Witness for Peace, SOA Watch and the International Longshore and Warehouse Union are among SINALTRAINAL's leading supporters — a list that is growing longer every day. Denial No. 4: Coca-Cola claims that “Coca-Cola bottlers in Colombia have extensive, normal relations with multiple labor unions, including SINALTRAINAL. Elsewhere in Latin America, more than half of the employees of Coca-Cola bottlers are represented by different labor unions.” The Truth: Regarding the conduct of Coca-Cola bottlers in Latin America generally, it must be noted that the Colombian occurrences were hardly the first serious human rights violations attributed to Coke. In the early 1980s, a Guatemalan Coca-Cola bottler was responsible for the brutal murders of at least eight union leaders. While The Coca-Cola Company, as usual, denied all responsibility, it was ultimately forced by an international pressure campaign to intervene in Guatemala. Obviously, SINALTRAINAL would not characterize its relations with the Coca-Cola bottlers as “normal.” To this day, SINALTRAINAL leaders are constantly living with threats by paramilitaries whose leaders are permitted to freely enter Coca-Cola plants and to meet openly with the local managers. There is also credible evidence that some Coca-Cola plant managers in Colombia continue to make monthly payments to these same paramilitaries. Paramilitary leaders have freely admitted (to National Public Radio reporter Steven Dudley, among others) that they have established bases around every Coca-Cola bottling plant in Colombia in order to “protect” Coke’s interests. Denial No. 5: Coca-Cola incessantly claims that Panamco Colombia provides employees and union officials with elaborate safety and security benefits. The Truth: This simply isn’t true! While some union officials receive security measures from the Colombian government and others pay for their own bodyguards and security equipment, Panamco Colombia supplies no such security assistance. Coca-Cola is either illinformed on this score or is simply lying. -3- 60 Hofstra Faculty Passes Resolution to End Coke Monopoly The Full Faculty of Hofstra University voted overwhelmingly on May 2 to support a resolution against the University’s exclusive contract with Coca-Cola. The decision came less than two weeks after 506 students voted on a Student Government referendum to discontinue the exclusive contract garnering more support than any candidate on the ballot. The resolution was officially endorsed by members of Long Island Teachers for Human Rights (LITHR), which is comprised of 129 members on Long Island. Thirty-six Hofstra professors from LITHR officially pledged their individual support prior to the meeting. My email mailbox was jam-packed of supportive responses from professors praising the students’ muckraking and persistence. The meeting itself was attended by approximately 130 professors from a wide variety of departments. The Business Development Center was so full, additional chairs had to be retrieved to meet the large attendance demand. The resolution was proposed by Professor Greg Maney from the Sociology Department, and an essential ally in ensuring the issue was on the agenda. The following is an excerpt from his speech to the Faculty: As educators, we often encourage our students to see how they are connected to the world around them. How their fates are interconnected with the fates of people living and working in different neighborhoods, different cities, even different countries. How human practices of production and consumption are connected with the quality of the natural environment… Moreover, as educators, we encourage our students to become aware of and engaged in the pressing issues of our times. In so doing we seek to make our shared vision of participatory democracy a meaningful reality…I was, therefore, particularly pleased when Hofstra students overwhelmingly passed a referendum calling upon the Administration not to renew our university’s exclusive vending contract with Coca-Cola due to the corporation’s profiting from human rights violations and environmental degradation…As an institution of higher education we are the voice of conscience in our society. As an institution of over 10,000 people, we also have the consumer power necessary to promote responsible corporate practices. I call upon my fellow faculty members to express our strongest desire to no longer subsidize a corporation that profits from the murdering of trade union leaders, that profits from the use of child labor, and that profits from the sale of toxic chemicals. He asked for permission for a student to speak, and I spoke for a few minutes about the rising student movement at Hofstra against Coca-Cola. I explained that I helped start the campaign at Hofstra after participating in a 2003 delegation with the Committee for Social Justice in Colombia while visiting my family in Bogota. I also gave them a brief outline of how the campaign has progressed since then through 61 a) a series of speaker events and workshops including union leaders Luis Adolfo Cardona, Juan Carlos Galvis, and Javier Carrera as well as Amit Srivastava from India Resource Center and Ray Rogers from Stop KillerCoke; b) circulation of a petition which collected over 1500 signatures c) several meetings with the administration, including a meeting with President Rabinowitz, the VP of Financial Affairs, VP of Campus Life and in which we presented a comprehensive portfolio consisting of evidence of Coca-Cola’s human rights violations in Colombia, India, and El Salvador, as well as detailed information on Student Activism and alternative beverages d) attending the Coca-Cola shareholders’ meeting in Wilmington, Delaware where Hofstra students were able to confront the CEO of Coca-Cola e) succeeding in the referendum, which is the official voice of the students I explained that Hofstra students’ dedication to promoting human rights and corporate responsibility has reached international recognition and their participation in this campaign has really put the University on the map. I also expressed how impressed and pleased we were by the level of support the faculty had already shown of the students. There was some disagreement at first. One professor claimed that he needed to see more proof, at which point Professor Maney distributed copies of NYC Council Member Hiram Monserrate’s investigative report on Coca-Cola’s human rights violations against union workers in Colombia, the Human Rights Watch report on Coca-Cola’s involvement in child labor in El Salvador, as well as Indian court decisions against Coca-Cola. Another professor made a motion to postpone the voting until the next meeting. The Speaker of the Faculty, Professor Seabold quickly stepped in and explained that to postpone the decision would make the resolution irrelevant for the contract was up for renewal this summer and this was the last meeting of the semester. Another professor claimed that this was the first she had ever heard of the issue, to which Professor Silvia Federici of New College responded, saying that this campaign has had a strong presence on campus for over a year, and that even though they are all busy, they have all had ample amount of time to research and look into the issue. Faculty member after faculty member stood up and made statements in support of the resolution. Professor Varisco from Anthropology said that he had been perusing the case against Coca-Cola for some time and has concluded that the human rights violations in question have been proven as much as any human rights case can be. He also strongly criticized the exclusivity of the Coca-Cola contract and how it promotes monopolies. In the end, when it was called for a vote, the room overwhelmingly voted yes in favor of the resolution, with only one professor against. 62 Although the formal decision is left up to President Rabinowitz whether or not to renew an exclusive contract with Coca-Cola this summer, the Students and Faculty have spoken, and our voices will not go unheard. The movement must not end here. We will continue to pressure the administration and we will continue our fight against Coca-Cola's corporate colonial empire, which has caused environmental devastation in India, assassinations in Colombia, and child slave labor in El Salvador. The whole world is watching. In solidarity, Vanessa Cudabac Campaign to Stop Killer Coke Hofstra University 63 WHO objects to reference in Coca-Cola campaigns Alok Sharma (from: http://www.financialexpress.com/fe_full_story.php?content_id=141037) New Delhi, Sept 20 Taking exception to its name being “unauthorisedly” used by Coca-Cola India in its promotional activities, the World Health Organisation (WHO) has asked the company to withdraw such references. In a letter to Coca-Cola’s president and CEO Atul Singh in the first week of September, the south east Asia office of the global health agency pointed out that its name was being used for commercial purposes, which is strictly prohibited. Coca-Cola India’s print advertisements between August 13 and 18 claimed, “Our products across the world follow a single system and undergo rigorous multiple barrier filtration process that is approved by WHO.” The company claimed that the soft drinks in the country are absolutely safe and meet the most strict safety norms. WHO asked Coca-Cola India to “immediately” restrain itself from making any references to the organisation in any of the company’s advertisements, products, communications, business cards or any written or published material. Confirming the receipt of letter, Coca-Cola India’s spokesperson said: “We stopped using WHO’s name in our campaigns even before WHO wrote to us.” He said the last ad appeared on August 18. In its response to WHO’s letter, Coca-Cola India wrote back, “We believe a bona fide reference to the WHO was made not in order to promote or advertise our company or product or to make a commercial gain, but was made in reference to the multiple barrier filtration process we use to process water used in the manufacture of our beverages.” Coca-Cola India had issued the ads to counter the allegations levelled by Delhi-based NGO Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) that its soft drinks had high level of pesticide content. In the promotion, the cola giant also said a government laboratory in the United Kingdom had tested its product against the most stringent pesticide norms used for bottled water in Europe. The Central Science Laboratories (CSL) had in its tests found the products were absolutely safe for human consumption, the company asserted in the ad. 64 Responsible Shopper Corporate Profile: Cadbury Schweppes (from: http://www.coopamerica.org/programs/rs/profile.cfm?id=198) Cadbury's chocolates and beverages are among the most popular on earth, and the company has worked to gain some popularity in social responsiblity circles. Green and Black's, a part of CadburySchweppes, sells some chocolate made with fairly traded cocoa and the company has been working on biodegradable trays for its milk chocolate candies sold in Australia. As positive as these moves may be, Cadbury still has sizable chocolate sales outside of Green and Black's that incorporate no Fair Trade certified cocoa, adding to the problem of poverty for cocoa farmers. The company has also been cited for illegally dumping hazardous waste from its bottling plants in the United States. Bottom line: if one Cadbury-Schweppes business segment can successfully use Fair Trade cocoa, then the company can work to make Fair Trade the standard and not the exception. -- Profile Updated 08/09/2006 About Cadbury Schweppes Cadbury Schweppes is the holding company for a group of international companies engaged primarily in the manufacture and sale of confectionery and soft drinks sold in more than 200 countries. Headquarted in London, the company reported sales of $11.19 billion in 2005 and employ 58,581 people. Contact Cadbury Schweppes Cadbury Schweppes 25 Berkeley Square London, W1X 6HT UK Phone: 207-409-1313 Web: www.cadburyschweppes.com Complaints, Abuses, and Scandals Contamination Over a million Cadbury Schweppes chocolate bars were recalled in the UK after the Health Protection Agency (HPA) found a rare salmonella strain in its products. A HPA investigation found that 37 of 56 salmonella cases reported between March and July were linked to Cadbury products. Products being taken off the shelves include Cadbury Dairy Milk Turkish 250g, Dairy Milk Caramel 250g, Dairy Milk Mint 250g, Dairy Milk Eight Chunk and Dairy Milk 1kg. The contamination was attributed to a leaking pipe at Cadbury’s Marlbrook plant, near Leominster, Herefordshire. Cadbury Schweppes estimated that the cost of the recall will amount to ?20 million by the end of this year. -- Reuters, 07/21/2006 Source URL: today.reuters.com/business/newsArticle.aspx?type=consumerProducts&stor... The 7-Up/RC Bottling Co. (part of Carbury Schweppes) pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles in November 2005 to 12 criminal counts of violating the Clean Water Act. Industrial runoff from the bottling facility included petroleum-based substances harmful to the environment, animal life and human health. 65 -- United Press International, 11/11/2005 Source URL: none available Corporate Influence In January 2001 Cover Concepts, a company that claims to reach 30 million kids in grades kindergarten through 12 in 43,000 schools nationwide by "working in tandem with school administrators to distribute free, advertiser-sponsored materials such as textbook covers, lesson plans, posters, bookmarks, specialty paks, lunch menus, and other fun educational materials" distributed 500,000 book covers for middle schools nationwide with samples of Cadbury Schweppes' Sour Patch Kids. -- Boston Globe, 01/12/2003 Source URL: none available Ethics Cadbury Schweppes is among 34 large companies shunned by the share index, FTSE4Good, which is aimed at helping ethical investors. The companies were excluded after receiving poor publicity for their environmental, social, and human rights activities -- the three areas FTSE4Good focuses on. -- Daily Star, 07/11/2001 Source URL: none available Executive Compensation In 2005, the CEO of Cadbury Schweppes received a salary of $4,562,237 USD. -- Cadbury Schweppes, 06/27/1905 Source URL: www.cadburyschweppes.com/EN Brands and Affiliates Brands: 7UP, A&W Root Beer, Allan, Aquaveta, Barratt, Bassett, Bazooka, Beldent, Bim Bim, Bouquet d'Or, Bubbas, Butterkist, Cadbury, Cadbury Caramel, Cadbury Creme Egg, Cadbury Crunchie, Cadbury Dairy Milk, Cadbury Dream, Cadbury Flake, Cadbury Miniature Heroes, Cadbury Roses, Cadbury TimeOut, Canada Dry, Carambar, Choclairs, Clamato, Cottee's, Country Time, Crush, Crystal Light, Dentyne, Diet Rite, Dirol, Dr. Pepper, Dulciora, Elegan, Fry's, Fuzzy Peach, Gini, Halls, Hawaiian Punch, Hollywood, Jelibon, La Casera, La Pie Qui Chante, MacRobertson, Mantecol, Mauna La'i, Maynards, Miss, Mistic, Mott's, Nantucket Nectars, Nehi, Oasis, Olips, Orangina, Pascall, Peter Paul, Piasten, Picnic, Poulain, RC Cola, Red Tulip, Relax, Relax (Kent), Schweppes, Sharps, Snapple, Solo, Sour Patch Kids, Sportlife, Spring Valley, Squirt, Stani, Stewart's, STIMOROL, Sun Valley Squeeze, Sunkist, Swedish Fish, Trebor, Trident, Trinaranjus, Turbo, V6, Wave, Wedel, Welch's, WhipperSnapple, YooHoo, York 66 Responsible Shopper Corporate Profile: Coca-Cola (from: http://www.coopamerica.org/programs/rs/profile.cfm?id=204) Coca-Cola is known the world over for producing a variety of tasty beverages from carbonated sodas to water. Promoting the company philosophy to "make every drop count," Coke officially encourages people to do the same in their own lives. Unfortunately, Coke continues to work against human rights, the environment, and the health of consumers, showing few signs of meaningful change. In Colombia, working at Coca-Cola bottling plants has cost lives and the personal safety of those trying to unionize. Eight union organizers have been murdered by Colombian paramilitaries and at least 100 others have been detained and beaten, and Coca-Cola has yet to conduct a full investigation of the claims. Coke's bottled water operations have made it the focus of at least two international water rights campaigns, as the company continues high-volume pumping in areas such as Kerala, India, where extreme shortages of potable water are already a problem. Coke signed onto the United Nations Global Compact, which aims to make companies more responsible corporate citizens, but the soft drink giant has taken no concrete steps toward remedying abuses currently tallied against it. Coke continues to reject the call to use its wealth and international status to set new standards for sustainability and respect for human rights in the countries where it operates. Bottom line: help the Campaign to Stop Killer Coke, Polaris Institute, and Corporate Accountability International stop Coke's abuses by taking action now. Use the Green Shift section to find alternatives to Coke. -- Profile Updated 09/22/2006 About Coca-Cola Coca-Cola manufactures ice cream, frozen deserts and flavored syrups in addition to its well-known line of carbonated beverages. Based in Atlanta, the company employs 49,000 people. Coca-Cola’s revenues for 2005 were $23.1 billion. Contact Coca-Cola Coca-Cola 1 Coca-Cola Plaza Atlanta, GA 30313 USA Phone: 404-676-2121 Web: www.cocacola.com Current Campaigns India Resource Center Coke Campaign India Resource Center is working to end Coke’s corporate abuses in India. Water shortages, pollution of groundwater and soil, exposure to toxic waste and pesticides is having impacts of massive proportions in India. Over 70% of the population makes a living related to agriculture, and thousands of farmers in India have been affected by Coca-Cola's practices. According to the India Resource Center, Coca-Cola has destroyed the livelihoods of thousands of people in India; however, the extent of the damage as a result from exposure to the toxic waste and pesticides is yet unknown, as these are long term problems. India Resource Center needs increased public involvement to stop Coke’s abuses in India. Click on the URL to learn more and take action now. www.indiaresource.org/action/faxcoke.php Corporate Accountability International Water Campaign Coke, Nestlé and Pepsi are misleading 67 consumers to believe that bottled water is healthier than tap water--but bottled water is actually less regulated than public water sources. Corporate Accountability International urges the public to tell Coke, Nestlé and Pepsi to end the deceitful promotion of their bottled water brands and to stop interfering in policies that protect public water. Take action now by clicking on the URL below. www.stopcorporateabusenow.org/campaign/exposebottledwater Campaign to Stop Killer Coke The campaign is working to stop the cycle of murders, kidnappings and torture of SINALTRAINAL (National Union of Food Industry Workers) union leaders and organizers at Coca-Cola bottling plants in Colombia. Since 1989, eight union leaders have been killed. The campaign aims to force Coca-Cola to prevent further bloodshed and to provide safe working conditions. www.killercoke.org Complaints, Abuses, and Scandals Health and Safety According to a September 22nd 2006 BBC article, the Kerala High Court overruled southern state’s ban on Coca-Cola and Pepsi products on the basis that such a decision did not “within the legal powers that rest with the government.” The southern state of Kerala banned the sale of Coca-Cola and Pepsi products after the Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) found high levels of pesticides and other hazardous chemicals in their products. Chief Minister VS Achuthanandan expressed great disappointment on this decision: "We hope the judges will hear our detailed arguments and correct their judgment, saving the health and lives of people.” The state government of Kerala has banned the production and sale of Coca-Cola and Pepsi in early August 2006. Chief Minister V.S. Achuthanandan announced this decision in response to scientific studies, primarily by the Centre for Science and Environment (CSE), revealing hazardous chemicals, such as lindane, chlorpyrifos, and heptachlor, in the companies’ products. The decision also comes in the wake of a four-year campaign by the community of Plachimada to permanently close the soft drink giants’ operations in the region. Coca-Cola and Pepsi are now being banned in government and educational institutions by several states in India, including Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka, Chattisgarh, Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat and Delhi. Regulations to govern consumer safety for soft drinks are underway in India. On July 1, 2006 community leaders from Mehdiganj, India ended a seven day hunger strike protesting Coca-Cola’s bottling operations. Activists were asking that Coca-Cola take responsibility for the negative ramifications its bottling plant had on surrounding villages, including water shortages, pollution of agricultural land and groundwater, illegal occupation of land, tax evasion, and poor treatment of its workers. The Central Pollution Control Board of India (CPCB) has agreed to set up an inquiry regarding Coca Cola's role in water contamination. Nearly 1,000 people from over 40 surrounding villages attended events and activities in support of the campaign. -- India Resource Center, 09/22/2006 Source URL: www.indiaresource.org Contamination The Centre for Science and Environment’s (CSE) comprehensive study, covering 25 different manufacturing plants over 12 Indian states, found dangerous levels of pesticides in all samples of the Coca-Cola and Pepsi products tested. On average, Coca-Cola drinks contained 27 times higher pesticide residues than the standards outlined by the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS). According to CSE this 68 poses serious health effects; even small doses of pesticides such as lindane, chlorpyrifos, and heptachlor, are known to cause cancer, neurological problems, and other health disorders. -- Centre for Science and Environment, 08/02/2006 Source URL: www.cseindia.org/misc/colaindepth/cola2006/pdf/cola-presentation.pdf Health and Safety According to the India Resource Center’s June 2006 report “Ground Water Resources in Plachimada,” there are harmful long-term effects to Coke’s operations, such as extreme water shortages, harvest shortages contamination of soil and groundwater, and serious health problems for local villagers and former workers. All 9 water samples, collected within a one kilometer radius of the plant, failed to meet the safety standards for drinking water as outlined by the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) as the samples contained excessive levels of dangerous toxic chemicals. Coca-Cola has avoided answering to the Indian government and people on the issue of water contamination due to cadmium in the Plachimada plant’s sludge. Two previous orders by the Kerala Pollution Control Board were ignored: one called for Coke to build an effluent treatment facility to deal with wastewater, the other required the company to pipe potable water into communities for residents most vulnerable to water shortages. Coca-Cola breached Indian law at its Plachimada bottling plant in southern India by continuing its “trial operations” on August 8, 2005. The Kerala State Pollution Control Board subsequently ordered Coke to "stop production of all kinds of products with immediate effect" at the plant on August 19. The Plachimada plant was originally pressured to stop operations in March 2004 due to complaints from the local community about pollution and an alarming loss of potable water. In January 2004, the Indian parliament banned Coke and Pepsi products from being sold in its cafeteria. According to the non-profit group CorpWatch, "The ban came as the result of tests, including those by the Indian government, which found high concentrations of pesticides and insecticides, including lindane, DDT, malathion and chlorpyrifos, in the colas, making them unfit for consumption. Some samples tested showed the presence of these toxins to be more than 30 times the standard allowed by the European Union." The India Resource Center also notes that Coca-Cola was implicated in a bribery scandal involving Kerala Pollution Control Board member K.V. Indulal. In 2003, Mr. Indulal maintained that the level of pollution coming from Coke’s bottling plant in Plachimada met acceptable standards. Shortly thereafter, the BBC and the Kerala Pollution Control Board launched separate investigations, both of which found environmental conditions beyond tolerable levels. -- India Resource Center, 06/01/2006 Source URL: www.indiaresource.org/ Ethics KLD Research & Analytics Inc has removed Coca-Cola from its Broad Market Social Index (BMSI), a listings of companies which pass KLD’s standard for corporate responsibility. Large institutional investors will ban Coca-Cola from its CREF Social Choice Account. As of December 2005, the CREF Choice Account held more than 1.25 million shares of Coca-Cola common stock, valued at over $50 million. -- Common Dreams Newswire, 07/18/2006 Source URL: www.commondreams.org/news2006/0718-22.htm Shareholder Resolutions 69 At the 2006 shareholder meeting, the New York City Employees Retirement System and Presbyterian Church are calling on Coke to "establish a special committee of independent directors, with authority to retain independent experts as needed, to oversee the company’s sponsorship of an independent delegation of inquiry to Colombia to examine the charges of collusion in anti-union violence that have been made against officials of Coca-Cola’s bottling plants in that country; and that the delegation includes representatives from U.S. and Columbian human rights organizations and be charged with preparing and presenting to the special committee and the Board a report on its findings, which will be made available to the shareholders by the next annual meeting of the Company." -- Interfaith Center for Corporate Responsibility, 05/01/2006 Source URL: www.iccr.org At the 2006 shareholder meeting, the As You Sow Foundation is calling on Coca-Cola to "review the efficacy of its container recycling program and prepare a report to shareholders, by September 1, 2006, on a recycling strategy that includes a publicly stated, quantitative goal for enhanced rates of beverage container recovery in the U.S. The report, to be prepared at reasonable cost, may omit confidential information." -- Interfaith Center for Corporate Responsibility, 05/01/2006 Source URL: www.iccr.org Water Rights The Supreme Court of Panama issued a $300,000 fine to Coca-Cola for a massive chemical coloring spill in the Bay of Panama and a nearby river. According to Panama's National Environmental Authority, 4,500 liters of chemicals spilled from a Coke processing facility turning a portion of the bay and river red, causing contamination and negatively impacting the environment. -- Polaris Institute, 04/20/2006 Source URL: none available Human Rights The London-based anti-poverty group, War on Want, released a new 'alternative report' on Coca-Cola, exposing the company's abuse of human rights and natural resources in Mexico, El Salvador, India, Guatemala, Colombia and Turkey. Cited abuses include suppressing unions, toxic dumping on agricultural lands, and exhausting water resources for its bottling operations. -- War on Want, 03/20/2006 Source URL: www.waronwant.org/?lid=11807 Ethics Lawyers representing thousands of apartheid victims at an appeal hearing in New York will revive 2002 compensation claims against foreign multinationals they accuse of aiding and abetting apartheid violence. Implicated corporations include BP, Barclays, Hewlett-Packard, Credit Suisse, Coca-Cola, DaimlerChrysler, Ford and Shell Oil. The plaintiffs and some 29 civil society groups and individuals allege that companies that supported the apartheid state violated the Sullivan code and US's constructive engagement policy designed to fight descrimination. Violations involved such activities as providing the regime with armoured vehicles for patroling townships, and creating the pass book which non-whites were required to carry to authorize their passage in otherwise white areas. -- Independent Online, 01/22/2006 Source URL: www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=14&click_id=6&art_id=vn200601221137... 70 Discrimination In August of 2005, Coca-Cola settled a discrimination lawsuit regarding its hiring practices in Harahan, Louisiana. The Labor Department found that Coke’s hiring standards were not uniformly applied, resulting in 800 women and minorities being unfairly bypassed for merchandiser positions. Coke promotes itself as an equal opportunity employer, however an investigation by the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs proved otherwise in the cases of these men and women. The company settled on paying $340,000 in back wages to those subjected to hiring discrimination, and has agreed to hire 42 of the women and minority applicants who were originally rejected. -- BizNewOrleans.com, 08/11/2005 Source URL: bizneworleans.com/109+M54242af9de3.html Water Rights Coke, Danone, Pepsi and Nestle werethe major targets of a 2005 Polaris Institute report exposing the darker side of the water industry. “Inside the Bottle: An Exposé of the Bottled Water Industry” highlights the abuses of these corporations, ranging from fraudulent advertising and ruthless water privatization to the distribution of unsafe water. These companies dominate the world’s bottled water market. -- Polaris Institute, 01/01/2005 Source URL: www.polarisinstitute.org Human Rights The US-based International Labour Rights Fund, and the US United Steelworkers filed a lawsuit against Coca -Cola accusing its franchised bottle plant in Colombia of using paramilitaries that allegedly have killed union organizers who tried to unionize workers at the bottling pla. In March 2004 a ruling by the Florida federal court dismissed Coca-Cola, while finding that the plaintiffs may continue with the suit against local bottling companies. The plaintiffs say they plan to appeal the ruling, claiming that a new agreement between Coca-Cola and its bottlers justifies the suit's claim against all the original defendants. -- Ethnic NewsWatch, 06/04/2004 Source URL: none available Toxic Emissions or Discharges In July 2003 a BBC investigation revealed dangerous levels of toxic metals and a known carcinogen-cadmium--in a waste product from the company's plant in Kerala India and which the company had given to local farmers to use as fertilizer. The BBC radio show "Face The Facts" took water samples from the wells surrounding the company and had the fertiliser analyzed in Britain. Analysis conducted at the University of Exeter revealed that not only was it useless as a fertiliser but it contained a number of toxic metals, including cadmium and lead. The water in near-by wells also had levels of lead "well above those set by the World Health Organisation," the BBC said. The plant had also come under attack from local community members because of its use of water resources. In April the Kerala government revoked the water-use permit of the plant because of fears that the exploitation of groundwater would lead to serious ecological damage and drought. A Parliament member from a local district warned that disruption of water supplies could affect not just drinking water but also irrigation in an area known for its rice paddies. Since May 2002 there have been daily pickets outside the plant. Coke denied the charges and insist that groundwater levels have not been affected by it facility. The revocation was overturned in court. 71 -- BBC News, 07/24/2003 Source URL: www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2003/07_july/24/face_f... Unfair Competition Coca-Cola is the focus of criticism for targeting children and schools with their aggressive marketing campaigns. Coke secures exclusive distribution rights in schools across the country by pressuring institutions with greater budgetary needs. The corporation unabashedly waves advertising dollars in the face of school districts to gain visibility and lock young consumers into a life of brand loyalty to CocaCola. By cornering the market, opposition groups claim that children are not given any healthy options to choose from. As of 2005, a handful of school districts and universities have successfully broken from commitments to exclusively sell Coke products on their campuses. Some of these schools include the following: Bard College, New York; Carleton College, Minnesota; Lake Forest College, Illinois; National College of Art and Design, Ireland; Trinity College, Ireland; University College, Dublin; Salem State College; College Dupage (Illinois); Oberlin College (Ohio). -- Polaris Institute Source URL: www.polarisinstitute.org/corp_profiles/public_service_gats_pdfs/coca_c... Worker Rights Coca-Cola workers in Turkey and Indonesia have had to face mass firings for their efforts to improve labor conditions. Employees of at least two of Coke’s bottling facilities in Turkey have found themselves jobless after openly working to initiate union activity. When workers protested the firings, they were met with police violence. Turkish laborers and their family members were attacked by police again while in the midst of talks with the management at one plant. In Indonesia, Coca-Cola is PT United Can Company’s largest and most important customer. Therefore, when the packaging company decided to intimidate 48 workers for openly forming a union, Coke could rightfully have intervened, using economic incentives to get PT to act ethically. The 12 leaders of unionization efforts have been fired, and the other continue to be harassed by PT management. Coca-Cola has yet to take action or make a statement regarding the ill treatment of workers. -- United Students Against Sweatshops (USAS) Source URL: www.unionvoice.org/campaign/coketurkey/wniggsu2z763nx7 Legal Disputes Coca-Cola has allegedly conspired with the government of Uzbekistan against Mansur Maqsudi’s company after he fell out of favor with the nation’s authoritarian ruler Islam Karimov. The arbitration claim seeks more than $100 million in damages, claiming that Coca-Cola actively aided Karimov’s government in stripping Mr. Maqsudi of his majority share in Coke’s bottling facility in Tashkent. -- CorpWatch, 06/13/2006 Source URL: www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=13721 Executive Compensation In 2005, E. Neville Isdell, Chairman and CEO of Coca-Cola Company, earned $12,350,336 in compensation including stock option grants from the Coca Cola Co. 72 -- AFL-CIO, 04/05/2006 Source URL: www.aflcio.org Worker Benefits In October 2002 AIDs activists worldwide planned demonstrations and rallies to protest Coca-Cola, which they insist must do more to help and treat HIV-infected workers and their families in Africa. Although the company had recently increased its benefits to provide anti-retroviral drugs to employees and spouses of its bottling companies in Africa, activists allege that the initiative will cover only 35 percent of Coke's bottler workforce in Africa and that its proposed 50 percent cost-sharing scheme will be too expensive for small and medium-sized bottlers. -- OneWorld.net, 10/17/2002 Source URL: www.oneworld.net Discrimination In May 2002 Coca-Cola agreed to pay $8.1 million to more than 2,000 female employees who were underpaid by the company. Forty-two million will be paid under an agreement the company struck with the U.S. Department of Labor and will go to 980 current and former employees in Coke's Atlanta-based corporate operations, mostly in professional-level jobs. An additional $3.9 million will be paid voluntarily by the company to 1,100 current and former female employees in Coke's North America operations. -- Savannah Morning News, 05/26/2002 Source URL: none available Health and Safety In August 2003 the head of the India-based Center for Science and Environment told reporters the levels of pesticides in Coca-Cola products in India was 30 times higher than guidelines used by the European Union. Levels of pesticides in rival PepsiCo brands tested were 36 times higher than European Union standards. The Center acknowledged that Indian brands also have high pesticide levels, because agricultural pesticides are in the country's ground water, but said the focus was on Coke and Pepsi because they account for more than three-fourths of the bottled soft drinks consumed in India. India has no laws banning pesticides in soft drinks. Top executives of Coke and Pepsi held a rare joint news conference denying the allegations and demanding to know what laboratories did the testing, and how the research was conducted. -- Environmental News Network Source URL: www.enn.com/news/2003-08-06/s_7241.asp According to CorpWatch, Coca Cola laces the beverages its sells in India with large doses of caffeine, which is known to be addictive, without citing it on the labels. The Indian group, Centre for Science and Environment, reportedly demanded that Coca-Cola display labels with "advisory statements to the effect that the beverage contains caffeine and the same is not recommended for children, pregnant or lactating women and individuals sensitive to caffeine." -- CorpWatch, 02/06/2004 Source URL: www.corpwatch.org Ethics In October 2003, Coca-Cola paid $540,000 to former finance manager, Matthew Whitley, an employee who claimed the company inflated its profits and knowingly sold contaminated drinks. Whitley, who lost his job one month after making “whistleblowing allegations,” sued Coca-Cola for unfair dismissal. That 73 same year, an Iranian court levied a 7.15 million dollar fine against the Coca-Cola Company for violating its contract with an Iranian soft drinks counterpart, Nushab Soft Drinks Company. Chairman of the Iranian company accused Coca Cola of using the United States’ sanctions against Iran as pretext for suspending the investments specified in their contract with Nushab. -- BBC News, 10/08/2003 Source URL: none available Legal Disputes In August 2003 Coca-Cola offered to pay up to $21.1 million to Burger King and its restaurants to repair damage caused by allegations that Coke's employees rigged a marketing test of Frozen Coke at the fastfood outlets. The announcement came after a former Coke manager claimed the company rigged a marketing test of the popularity of the new drink and artificially boosted equipment sales. Under the terms of the proposal, Coke will pay $1,000 to each restaurant that had a Frozen Coke machine installed as of May 2000, part of any repair costs for the machines and make up any losses that Burger King franchisees had with the equipment. Eighty percent of the Burger King franchises who tested the equipment have to agree to the terms of settlement. -- Associated Press, 08/12/2003 Source URL: none available Toxic Emissions or Discharges In May 2003, Coca-Cola de Panama was fined US $300,000 for polluting Matasnillo River in Panama. -- CorpWatch, 07/10/2003 Source URL: none available Disclosure In March 2004, Coca Cola admitted the UK version of Coca-Cola's Dasani brand bottled water is really treated water from London’s public supply. -- CorpWatch, 03/04/2003 Source URL: www.corpwatch.org In 2002 Coca-Cola was among the first companies to deduct the value of executive stock options as an expense.The action was taken in response to increasing public demands for clear and complete financial statements. Prior to the corporate accounting scandals many companies relied heavily on options to compensate executives but did not deducted them as expenses. Analysts blame the use of large numbers of options that aren't reflected in earnings for creating incentives for executives to artificially inflate stock prices. -- San Jose Mercury News, 08/06/2002 Source URL: none available Corporate Influence Danone Waters North America, now fully-owned by Coke, has partnered with the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry (AAPD) to promote flourinated bottled water for children. The Center for Science in the Public Interest has expressed concerns that the AAPD is endorsing Coca-Cola, "a company whose products cause tooth decay, obesity, and other health problems in children." -- Polaris Institute, 04/20/2006 Source URL: www.polarisinstitute.org 74 Special Awards Coca-Cola was named as one of the "Worst Corporations of 2004" by Multinational Monitor. The company was named to the list for the "extensive documentation of rampant violence committed against Coke's unionized workforce by paramilitary forces." The publication cites an April 2004 report from a delegation headed by New York City Council Member Hiram Monserrate that says, "To date, there have been a total of 179 major human rights violations of Coca-Cola's workers, including nine murders. Family members of union activists have been abducted and tortured. Union members have been fired for attending union meetings…Most troubling to the delegation were the persistent allegations that paramilitary violence against workers was done with the knowledge of and likely under the direction of company managers…Shockingly , company officials admitted to the delegation that they had never investigated the ties between plant managers and paramilitaries" -- Multinational Monitor, 12/01/2004 Source URL: none available Fraud In January 2004 Coca-Cola announced that it was being investigated by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) over allegations against the company in a wrongful-termination lawsuit. The investigation stems from a lawsuit filed by a former finance director in Coke's fountain division who accused the company of committing $2 billion in accounting fraud, discriminating against minorities and women and manipulating inventories. -- SocialFunds.com, 07/23/2004 Source URL: none available Ethics In 2002 nine former and current Coca-Cola workers filed three class-action lawsuits against the company claiming it bilked workers out of $200 million in pay over a four year period. In the lawsuits workers alleged the company had managers manipulate an electronic timekeeping system and to eliminate overtime hours worked by merchandisers. Other workers claimed they were harassed out of claiming overtime hours by managers, who would berate and belittle them. In 2001 Coca-Cola paid $20.2 million to settle a lawsuit filed by salaried employees claiming they were cheated out of overtime pay. -- Reuters, 12/04/2002 Source URL: none available In May 2002 several Coca-Cola workers in Dallas claimed the company was re-packaging and selling nearly-expired soft drinks to minority neighborhoods at lower prices. One worker who made deliveries for the company to both white and black neighborhoods said that soda in the white neighborhoods which was a month short of its expiration date was shipped back to the bottler for re-packaging with new expirations dates and then delivered to minority neighborhoods where it sold for almost half the price. The company denied the claims. -- CBS News, 05/21/2002 Source URL: none available Brands and Affiliates Brands: A&W, Barq's, Caffeine Free Coca-Cola Classic, Caffeine Free Diet Coke, Cherry Coke, Citra, Coca-Cola C2, Coca-Cola Classic, Crush, Dasani, Diet Barq's, Diet Cherry Coke, Diet Coke, Diet Mello Yello, Diet Sprite, Dr. Pepper, Fanta, Five Alive, Fresca, Fruitopia, Georgia Coffee, Hi-C, Mello Yello, Minute Maid, Mr. Pibb, Nordic Mist, Odwalla, Powerade, Santiba, Simply Orange, Sprite, Surge, Tab 75 Col lege s , Un i v e r s i t ie s and H igh Sc hool s Act i ve in the Campaign to S top K i l l er Coke Colleges and Universities active and those who have already cut contracts (*) : American University, Washington, DC Amherst College, Massachusetts Antioch College, Ohio Bard College, New York* Beloit College, Wisconsin Boston College, Massachusetts Bowdoin College, Maine Brandeis University, Massachusetts Bristol University, UK Bryn Mawr College California State University — Dominguez Hills, California Canadian College of Naturopathic Medicine, Canada Cardiff University, UK Carleton College, Minnesota * Carleton University, Canada Carnegie Mellon University, Pennsylvania Christ College, India City University of New York, New York City University of New York Law School * Clark University, Massachusetts College of Charleston, South Carolina College of DuPage, Illinois * The College of William & Mary, Virginia Connecticut College, Connecticut Cordozo Law School, New York DePaul University, Illinois * DePauw University, Indiana Dominican University, Illinois * Duke University, North Carolina East Los Angeles College, California Emory University, Oxford, Georgia Felician College, New Jersey Evergreen State College, Washington Fordham University, New York Georgetown University, Washington, DC Georgian Court University, New Jersey Grinnell College, Iowa *(6) Hampshire College, Massachusetts * Harvard University, Massachusetts Haverford College, Pennsylvania Hofstra University, New York*(1) Holyoke Community College, Massachusetts Hunter College, CUNY, New York Illinois State University, Illinois Illinois University, Illinois Indiana University, Indiana Indiana University Northwest, Indiana Iowa State University, Iowa Kennesaw State University, Georgia Kankakee Community College, Illinois Kent State, Ohio Lake Forest College, Illinois * Lakehead University, Canada Leeds University, UK Loyola University, Illinois Loyola University, Louisiana Macalester College, Minnesota *(1) Malaspina University College, Canada Manhattanville College, New York * Maynooth University, Ireland McMaster University, Canada (2) Miami University, Ohio Michigan State University, Michigan Middle Tennessee State University, Tennessee Middlesex University, UK Mt. Holyoke College, Massachusetts Nassau Community College, New York National College of Art and Design, Ireland * National University of Ireland, Ireland New College of Florida, Florida New York University, New York * Northeastern Illinois University, Illinois Northern Arizona University, Arizona Northland College, Ashland, Wisconsin Oberlin College, Ohio * Oklahoma City University, Oklahoma Oklahoma University, Oklahoma Oxford University, UK (Wadham*, St. John's*, St. Hilda's* JCR) Portland State University, Oregon Purdue University — Calumet, Indiana Purdue University — West Lafayette, Indiana Queen College, CUNY, New York Queens University, Canada Queensborough Community College, CUNY, New York * Roma Tre, Rome, Italy * Rutgers University, New Jersey * Ryerson Univeristy, Canada St. John's University, New York St. Joseph's University, Pennsylvania St. Louis University, Missouri Saddleback College, California Salem State College, Massachusetts * San Francisco State University, California School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), UK * Simon Fraser University, Canada 76 Smith College, Massachusetts Suffolk County Community College, New York SUNY Geneseo, New York SUNY Oswego, New York SUNY Stony Brook, New York Sussex University, UK * Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania * (5) Trinity College, Ireland * Truman State University, Missouri Union Theological Seminary, New York* University College Dublin, Ireland * University of Alberta, Canada University of Arts, Berlin, Germany University of Birmingham, UK University of Bonn, Germany University of British Columbia, Canada University of California — Berkeley, California University of California — Santa Barbara, California University of California — Santa Cruz, California University of Chicago, Illinois University of Cincinnati, Ohio University of Cologne, Germany University of Connecticut, Connecticut University of Detroit Mercy, Michigan University of East Anglia, UK * University of Edinburgh, Scotland University of Georgia, Georgia University of Guelph — Student Union, Canada * University of Illinois at Chicago, Illinois University of Illinois — Urbana-Champaign, Illinois University of Iowa, Iowa University of Lethbridge, Canada University of London, UK University of Massachusetts, Massachusetts University of Michigan, Michigan, Flint, Dearborn (4) University of Minnesota, Minnesota University of Missouri (Kansas City), Missouri University of Montana, Montana University of New Hampshire, New Hampshire University of Ottawa, Canada University of Portsmouth, UK University of San Diego, California University of San Francisco, California University of Santa Clara, California* University of Southern California, California University of Toronto, Canada University of Vermont, Vermont University of Washington, Washington University of Waterloo, Canada University of Western Ontario, Canada University of Wisconsin — Madison, Wisconsin University of Wisconsin — Milwaukee, Wisconsin University of Wuppertal, Germany University of York, UK Valparaiso University, Indiana Vassar College, New York Washington University, Missouri Wayne State University, Michigan Wesley College, Bristol, UK West Virginia University, West Virginia Western Michigan University Wheaton College, Illinois Wilkes University, Pennsylvania York University, Canada High Schools active in the Campaign to Stop Killer Coke include: Ames High School, Iowa Cretin-Derham Hall, Minnesota Golden Valley School, Minnesota Loyola Academy, Illinois Marquette University High School Minoa Central High School, East Syracuse, NY Notre Dame High School, Canada Rocky Mountain High School, Colorado St. Michael's Catholic Secondary School, Canada St. Peter's Prep, New Jersey * Staten Island Academy, New York Stratford Central Secondary School, Canada The Student School, Canada * Turners Fall High School, Massachusetts (3) Vincent Massey Collegiate, Canada Waukesha South High School, Wisconsin Xavier High School, Canada * Campuses that have terminated major contracts with Coca-Cola due to the company’s human rights abuses in Colombia. Many labor unions and other institutions (such as the Park Slope Food Coop in Brooklyn, NY) have also terminated contracts and/or removed Coke machines or banned the sale or distribution of Coke products from their premises. 77 (1) Did not renew its exclusive contract with Coke. (2) Passed a non-binding resolution to not renew its contract with Coke. (3)The Gill-Montague (Massachusetts) School Committee voted to not accept Coke's offer of a new scoreboard for the high school athletic field in exchange for a 7-year contract to sell Coke products in the schools. Gill and Montague are two small towns (populations of about 1,000 and 8,000) in Western Massachusetts. The school district is composed of several elementary schools (Gill, Hillcrest, Montague Center and Sheffield Elementary Schools), 1 middle school (Great Falls Middle School), and 1 high school (Turners Fall High School). (4) "Temporarily" suspended business with Coke until the Company agrees to an independent investigation of human rights and environmental abuses. U of M Chief Financial Officer Tim Slottow decided on his own to resume sale of Coke products based on false information from The Coca-Cola Co. (See the Campaign's response to this decision.) (5) "…Coca-Cola products will be replaced with Pepsi drinks at Essie Mae’s Snack Bar and the Science Center and Kohlberg coffee bars over spring break as the first step in eliminating Coke from Swarthmore’s campus." (6) Ended its exclusive contract with Coke. "There are now 10 Coke vending machines on campus, down from 26 last year. Pepsi has installed 11 machines and Doctor Pepper/7-Up has 12." 78 Further Resources: The following websites provide current and in-depth information on the Coca-Cola campaign and related issues: • United Students Against Sweatshops: www.studentsagainstsweatshops.org • Campaign to Stop Killer Coke: www.killercoke.org • CokeWatch: www.cokewatch.org • CorpWatch: www.corpwatch.org • International Labor Rights Fund: www.laborrights.org • United Steel Workers of America: www.uswa.org • Colombia Watch: www.colombiawatch.org • U.S. Labor Education in the Americas Project: www.usleap.org • Committee for Social Justice in Colombia: www.socialjusticecolombia.org • Health Gap Global Access Project: www.treat-your-workers.org Coca-Cola Campaign Contacts: Ray Rogers Campaign to Stop Killer Coke Stopkillercoke@aol.com (718) 852-2808 www.killercoke.org United Students Against Sweatshops (212) 332-9351 www.studentsagainstsweatashops.org Amit Srivastava amit@indiaresource.org www.indiaresource.org Dan Kovalik United Steelworkers of America DKovalik@uswa.org (412) 562-2518 Terry Collingsworth International Labor Rights Fund (202) 347-4100 terry.collingsworth@ilrf.org