Bangkok Post

LEADING THE WAY

Adidas revealed as the overall winner

- KIERAN GUILBERT

German sportswear giant Adidas and three others pick up Stop Slavery Awards.

LONDON: German sportswear giant Adidas AG led the pack as four companies won a global award on Wednesday for shining a light on their own supply chains to eradicate modern slavery from their operations.

Adidas was revealed as the overall winner of the second Thomson Reuters Foundation Stop Slavery Award, which celebrates businesses that excel in efforts to identify, investigat­e and root out forced labour from their supply chains.

Global fashion retailer C&A, US technology company Intel Corp and British mutually-owned retail and services group The Co-operative Group were the other winners of the annual award designed by Turner Prize winning sculptor Anish Kapoor.

With modern slavery increasing­ly dominating headlines worldwide, businesses are under increasing pressure from both government­s and consumers to disclose what actions they are taking to ensure their supply chains are free from slavery.

About 25 million people globally were estimated to be trapped in forced labour in 2016, according to the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on (ILO) and rights group Walk Free Foundation.

“Whilst we have outsourced our production and manufactur­ing all over the world, we will not outsource our moral responsibi­lity which is to do right by the 1.3 million workers who make our products,” said Aditi Wanchoo, senior manager of social and environmen­tal affairs at Adidas, at the Thomson Reuters Foundation’s annual Trust Conference.

The winners were chosen from a shortlist of 15 companies that employ millions of people worldwide in sectors ranging from electronic­s and hospitalit­y to retail and banking and included Barclays Plc, Nestle SA and Wal-Mart Stores Inc.

The shortlist was selected after businesses completed a detailed questionna­ire, designed in partnershi­p with human rights specialist­s at multi-national law firm Baker & McKenzie, giving details about their operations.

An independen­t specialist assessed the company submission­s on the strength of anti-traffickin­g policies already in place, as well as their ability to identify and respond to problems.

Adidas, the world’s second-biggest sportswear firm, was hailed for its transparen­t audits, strong responsibl­e sourcing guidelines, and robust tools to trace higherrisk supply chains.

The sportswear giant was one of the world’s first companies to create a role dedicated to fighting slavery, and uses technology to encourage workers to speak out about any abuses.

The Co-operative Group was honoured for having excelled in business partnershi­p and supplier engagement, and won praise for its ‘Brighter Future’ programme which aims to offer jobs to 30 slavery and traffickin­g victims in Britain.

“We want to go further than our own supply chains in tackling modern slavery,” said Pippa Wicks, deputy chief executive of The Co-operative Group.

Intel, the world’s largest computer chipmaker, was awarded for its innovation, in particular an initiative which leverages the company’s data analytics, and uses artificial intelligen­ce to combat child sexual exploitati­on in the United States.

The company has openly discussed its anti-slavery efforts, and refused new business with several suppliers who have failed to implement measures to combat forced labour, the judges said.

Fashion retailer C&A, which was praised by the judges for going beyond compliance standards in all categories, called for more collaborat­ion between brands, government­s and civil society to implement projects which tackle slavery in source countries.

The C&A Foundation, affiliated with retailer C&A, is in a partnershi­p with the Thomson Reuters Foundation on traffickin­g.

The Stop Slavery Award was won last year by Hewlett Packard Enterprise and NXP Semiconduc­tors.

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