A lifetime membership to Upskillist is on sale for 75% off
TL;DR: A lifetime membership to Upskillist is on sale for £80.60, saving you 75% on
2023-05-28 12:23
Microsoft Sales Top Estimates as Cloud Growth Picks Up Steam
Microsoft Corp. posted its strongest sales increase in six quarters, bolstered by recovering cloud-computing growth amid demand for
2023-10-25 07:53
High inflation fails to boost most UK companies' profits
By David Milliken LONDON Britain's highest inflation in four decades failed to boost company profits last year, with
2023-05-30 20:25
Gold demand down with lower central bank buying in Q3, WGC says
By Polina Devitt LONDON Global gold demand excluding over-the-counter (OTC) trading slipped 6% in the third quarter as
2023-10-31 14:54
Cargill fiscal 2023 revenue rises 7% to record $177 billion
By Karl Plume Global commodities trader Cargill Inc reported this week that its fiscal year 2023 revenue increased
2023-08-04 02:16
‘They abuse us’: Female workers making Fifa World Cup merchandise face systemic harm, says report
Female workers who produce Fifa merchandise for events such as the Women’s World Cup have endured pay below minimum wage, verbal abuse, unpaid overtime and threats of job loss if they fall pregnant, according to a new report by human rights researcher Equidem. Equidem has criticised Fifa for not taking action on a situation that seems to go against the advances the tournament has been responsible for, and president Gianni Infantino has been urged to extend “that progress to addressing the harms its women workers experience”. Equidem has put its report into the context of the litany of migrant labour abuses that occurred due to the men’s World Cup in Qatar and asked why there has been no update from a human rights subcommittee that was supposed to be set up to assess the legacy of that event, raising questions about Fifa’s expressed commitment to improving working conditions. The report features interviews with women workers in factories in Bangladesh that make official merchandise for Fifa events, and involves distressing testimonies including verbal abuse and the illegal denial of worksite childcare and maternity leave. Equidem heard several stories of women denied freedom of association. “We have a daily target to reach,” one worker said. “The supervisor fixes our daily target. I make 60-80 pieces per hour. I can only go to the restroom after finishing my hourly target. When a lot of work piles up, they don’t let us go anywhere. They verbally abuse us. I work for 10-12 hours a day at my sewing machine. Today, my supervisor told me to give 80 pieces per hour, but it was quite difficult to make 80 pieces. I made 60 pieces per hour. He shouted at me several times. “I can’t keep my son with me. I work between eight and 12 hours every day. Who will look after him? I searched for someone to leave my son with when I went to work, but I did not get anyone. We don’t have a childcare room in our factory. My son lives in Dhaka with my mother-in law and father-in-law.” Workers described a common practice of being told they would lose their jobs if they became pregnant during the first two years of employment. One woman employed as a sewing machine operator explained: “When I started working here, the factory doctor told me not to have babies for the first two years. I was told that after completing two years, I can have children. If I get pregnant before that, I will have to resign. They will not give me any leave.” Some workers spoken to by Equidem reported that they did not get paid any maternity leave at all, even though they are supposed to be legally entitled to four months, making it a clear violation of Bangladeshi law. Equidem’s CEO Mustafa Qadri states: “After the Men’s World Cup this past year in Qatar, FIFA pledged to set up a human rights subcommittee that would assess the legacy of the 2022 tournament, although there has been no further update as to the status of that assessment, nor its learnings. Equidem urges FIFA to extend its expressed commitment to improving working conditions to women workers in their apparel supply chains. "Yet, the world has seen significant advances in pay parity for women players, including making the Women’s World Cup more professional, ensuring equal regulations and conditions, and fair distribution of prize money to players. The United States team, after years of negotiations, public battles, and court filing won an equal pay deal that makes them one of the best-paid national teams in the world. "The FIFA Women’s World Cup 2023 brings with it many positive improvements for its players, and it is crucial that FIFA extends that progress to addressing the harms its women workers experience. FIFA has the power, money, and resource to address this at the systemic level, and we will keep monitoring their global supply chains until it does. “This movement toward gender parity within FIFA, signals a heightened commitment within the organisation to fair conditions for women players—on par with their male counterparts. This should extend to all women, not just those under the stadium lights.” A Fifa spokesperson said: “FIFA has stringent labour rights requirements for companies producing FIFA-licensed goods and takes any allegation of labour rights abuse in its supply chain very seriously. FIFA is in contact with both Equidem and the respective companies to further investigate the matter.” Read More Fifa urged to make human rights key consideration for World Cup 2030 host ‘Matter of when not whether’ UK hosts Women’s World Cup – sports minister Kevin De Bruyne says new approach to added time ‘doesn’t make any sense’ How much added time? Football’s new guidelines and the impact they will have Raphael Varane says players’ opinions ignored over ‘damaging’ new guidelines
2023-08-10 17:16
LOTTERY ALERT: KRISPY KREME® Extends Mega Glaze Days
CHARLOTTE, N.C.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug 3, 2023--
2023-08-04 02:29
Central banks' rate hike push slips into August lull, EM diverging
By Karin Strohecker and Vincent Flasseur LONDON Central banks across major developed and emerging economies took a breather
2023-09-05 00:52
Japan Five-Year Yield Hits Highest Since 2013 Amid Debt Rout
Yields on Japan’s five-year government notes rose to their highest level since 2013 following a selloff in the
2023-10-04 10:20
Organic Brand Tractor Beverage Company Takes On Industry Monoliths In Its First Ad Campaign
HAYDEN, Idaho--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jul 12, 2023--
2023-07-12 20:28
Central banks in no rush to cut interest rates
Investors were hoping to hear central banks finally signal this week that they were close to being done raising interest rates...
2023-09-23 01:46
Vodafone, Three announce plan for biggest UK mobile group
Mobile phone giant Vodafone has agreed to merge British operations with Three UK, owned by Hong Kong-based CK Hutchison, to create Britain's biggest operator with 27 million customers and accelerate rollout of...
2023-06-14 23:54
You Might Like...
Twitter Withdraws From EU Disinformation Code, Commissioner Says
Trial starts in Sweden of 2 oil executives accused of complicity in war crimes in Sudan
Ex-George Santos Fundraiser Sam Miele Will Plead Guilty to US Charges
EU states approve world's first comprehensive crypto rules
Vista Outdoor Announces General Counsel for Revelyst
Could the June CPI report change the Fed's rate trajectory?
US equity funds see third weekly inflow on rate optimism
China Slides Into Deflation as Consumer, Producer Prices Decline
