ChatterBank2 mins ago
For The Many Not The Few.
For the many not the few, unless you live in India and are paid a pittance for Corbyns momentum group.
\\The shirts are manufactured for the Corbyn-backing Momentum group in a factory in Coimbatore.//
\\Rapanui, which manufactures the shirts, pay some workers less than half the wage needed to cover basic needs, sources claim//
Less than half the wage to live on.
https:/ /www.th esun.co .uk/new s/46873 10/t-sh irts-ch eap-lab our-ind ia-jere my-corb yn-hypo crisy-c laims/
Dave.
\\The shirts are manufactured for the Corbyn-backing Momentum group in a factory in Coimbatore.//
\\Rapanui, which manufactures the shirts, pay some workers less than half the wage needed to cover basic needs, sources claim//
Less than half the wage to live on.
https:/
Dave.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Rapanui is a British Company, and their brand is based on the sustainability of its sourcing. If anything, Momentum and the other customers of this firm, are the victims, if the allegation is true. The company claim to visit its suppliers factories, so we have a situation where it is their word, against 'the Sun'. I'm inclined to believe Rapanui.
// We're from the Isle of Wight in the UK, and we started our company in a garden shed with £200 and a mission: Make clothing more sustainable. That was in 2008. Times have changed and thankfully, so have our business premises: Our values and purpose is still the same. We make our products from more sustainable materials like Organic Cotton and British Wool. Most of our work in the first few years of our brand has been in helping customers understand where clothing comes from and how it's made. We created some of the first connected, traceable supply chain maps on the internet. You can scan the code inside every product we make and find out more info about it's origins. //
// Throughout we've sought to work with responsible suppliers that do things the right way. As well as being a Global Organic Textile Standard certified company ourselves, independent auditors inspect our overseas supply chain for a wide range of sustainability criteria from ensuring inks and dyes are not harmful and handled correctly, to ensuring pay and working conditions are fair (e.g. SA8000). We don't just rely on audits, we visit factories personally. That's what we think responsible fashion means. //
https:/ /rapanu iclothi ng.com
// We're from the Isle of Wight in the UK, and we started our company in a garden shed with £200 and a mission: Make clothing more sustainable. That was in 2008. Times have changed and thankfully, so have our business premises: Our values and purpose is still the same. We make our products from more sustainable materials like Organic Cotton and British Wool. Most of our work in the first few years of our brand has been in helping customers understand where clothing comes from and how it's made. We created some of the first connected, traceable supply chain maps on the internet. You can scan the code inside every product we make and find out more info about it's origins. //
// Throughout we've sought to work with responsible suppliers that do things the right way. As well as being a Global Organic Textile Standard certified company ourselves, independent auditors inspect our overseas supply chain for a wide range of sustainability criteria from ensuring inks and dyes are not harmful and handled correctly, to ensuring pay and working conditions are fair (e.g. SA8000). We don't just rely on audits, we visit factories personally. That's what we think responsible fashion means. //
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Quizmonster, let’s not be disingenuous. This sort of accusation rolls out across the board. Here’s one from the Guardian.
https:/ /www.th eguardi an.com/ busines s/2016/ feb/14/ marks-a nd-spen cer-wor kers-sr i-lanka -india- banglad esh-ear nings-l iving-w age-lab our-beh ind-the -label
https:/