National Post

Mideast Starbucks franchisee to fire 2,000

- Jon Gambrell

• The Middle East franchisee of Starbucks said Tuesday it has begun firing around 2,000 workers at its coffee shops across the region after the brand found itself targeted by activists during the ongoing Israel-hamas war in the Gaza Strip.

The Kuwait-based Alshaya Group, a private family firm holding franchise rights for a variety of Western companies, including The Cheesecake Factory, H&M and Shake Shack, issued a statement acknowledg­ing the firings at its Middle Eastern and North African locations.

“As a result of the continuall­y challengin­g trading conditions over the last six months, we have taken the sad and very difficult decision to reduce the number of colleagues in our Starbucks MENA stores,” the statement read.

Alshaya later confirmed it was firing about 2,000 employees, as first reported by Reuters. Many of its employees in the Gulf Arab states are foreign workers hailing from Asian nations.

Alshaya runs about 1,900 Starbucks branches in Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Morocco, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and United Arab Emirates. It had employed more than 19,000 staff, according to the Seattle-based company. The layoffs represent just over 10 per cent of its staff.

Since the beginning of the war on Oct. 7, Starbucks has found itself alongside other Western brands targeted by pro-palestinia­n activists over the war. The company has been trying to counter what it describes as “ongoing false and misleading informatio­n being shared about Starbucks” being spread online.

“We have no political agenda,” Starbucks said. “We do not use our profits to fund any government or military operations anywhere — and never have.”

In October, Starbucks sued Workers United, which has organized workers in at least 370 U.S. Starbucks stores, over a pro-palestinia­n message posted on a union social media account.

Starbucks said it was trying to get the union to stop using its name and likeness, as the post also drew protests from pro-israel demonstrat­ors. Boycotters also felt the company wasn’t adequately supporting Palestinia­ns in the Gaza Strip.

Starbucks revenue rose 8 per cent to a record US$9.43 billion for the October-december period. But that was lower than the US$9.6 billion analysts had forecast, likely in part because of activist boycotts.

Starbucks isn’t the only brand targeted by activists in the war. Others have called for a boycott of Mcdonald’s after a local franchisee in Israel announced in October that it was providing free meals to Israeli soldiers.

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