Furniture giant IKEA has agreed to pay 6 million euros ($6.5 million) towards a government fund compensating victims of forced labour under Germany’s communist dictatorship, in a move campaigners hope will pressure other companies to follow.
Furniture giant IKEA has agreed to pay 6 million euros ($6.5 million) towards a government fund compensating victims of forced labor under Germany’s communist dictatorship, in a move campaigners hope will pressure other companies to follow.
"After it became known that the company was involved in forced prison labor, IKEA accepted our invitation to talk."
So from the sound of it IKEA didn't give two shits as long as no one knew, just like any other big company. You cannot tell me that people at IKEA simply didn't know, someone knew.
Pretty much everyone knew but OTOH it's not like they were making contracts with prisons, they had contracts with ordinary GDR companies which used prison labour to supplement their own workforce, often on an irregular basis. E.g. if you had a contract with a GDR company to supply a certain number of t-shirts per month for three years, they'd do it with their own workforce, they'd get another short-term contract and fulfil part of that and part of your contract with prison labour. The whole economy was infested with it, basically impossible to do business with the GDR and not have prison labour involved somewhere in the supply chain. What are you expecting, you're doing business with tankies.
I'd see stronger culpability if they had been contracting out dangerous work. GDR wasn't stellar at work safety in general, not atrocious either, but prison labour in e.g. the chemical industry? It's not that they didn't gave a fuck, it was extra unsafe by design.
I am sure Ikea will acknowledge having contributed to illegal deforestation of original forests in Romania, Belarus, and Russia in the 2020s at some point, too.
Because they are currently the only company acknowledging their fault? Boycotting them while ignoring all the other companies benefiting from the exact same practice seems counterproductive…
They didn't reveal the information, the former prisoners first shone light on it when they asked for compensation.
They only felt like they had to make amends once the story came out, not during the 30 years prior. strange how that goes
Take control of the narrative.
Pay a research group to confirm what has already been revealed. On the wikipedia page it almost seems like the whole thing was their idea
(from a quick search this was revealed in 2011 by a german media, opening Stasi files)
This is in no way a defense, but rather an accusation: many other companies pull or have pulled similar things. Hasbro famously used near slave labor when they partnered with Good Shepherd Sisters, one of many similar "Magdalene Laundries"; religious convents that some women were put in for sins as horrifying as "having a baby out of wedlock."
Behind the Bastards discusses them in their episodes titled "How the catholic church murdered Ireland's babies"
It's s bit different when you do forced labour for actual crimes and not just because you had an opinion. Disagreeing with the government is not the same as rape and murder. These germans were sentenced to life for belieiving in modern rights.
Actual crimes, as in manslaughter, rape, stealing from another.
No. It is not different. Nobody should be forced to do Labour. Prisons are not supposed to be money making machines. Prisons are supposed to reintegrate people into society. But I guess the US has not heard about that.
Who gets to decide what "actual crimes" are and what aren't? For instance in Germany for good reason hate speech is forbidden and in rare cases can put you in prison. By US standards inconceivable. Meanwhile in the US people are coerced into plea deals for crimes they didnt commit, or get mandatory minimum sentences for drug posession in small quantities.