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Zurich
and Basle, 12 January 2006
The Public Eye Awards Make an Impact
On the opening day of the World Economic Forum (WEF),
The Berne Declaration and Pro Natura will confer the Public Eye
Awards for the second year for particularly irresponsible corporate
behavior. Over 20 corporations, both domestic and foreign, have been
nominated in the categories Environment, Social Rights and Taxes. In
addition, a Positive Award will be given for the first time.
The well-known actor and satirist Patrick Frey will moderate the awards
ceremony in Davos.
Held at the same time as the WEF, and the only true alternative,
the Public Eye has already become an institution since its
inception in 2000. Dr. Gret Haller, publicist and former National Assembly
president, will open the awards ceremony on 25 January 2006 with a speech
about corporate responsibility.Our symbolic Public Eye Awards
should remind WEF members and other corporations that the public is
keeping an eye on them. The disregard for human and labor rights is
just as unacceptable today as environmental sins and tax avoidance,
says Oliver Classen from The Berne Declaration. For Sonja Ribi from
Pro Natura it is clear: Transnational companies must be subjected
to binding international rules that make them legally responsible, accountable,
and most of all liable for their actions. The 2005 awards had
varying effects on the winners. The Swiss branch of accounting firm
KPMG International, awarded last year for abetting tax avoidance, formed
a subsidiary for its aggressive tax consulting for super-rich individuals.
And the oil multinational Shell, awarded for open gas burning
in Nigeria, was recently ordered by Nigerian courts to discontinue this
nasty business practice.
Last autumn, non-government organizations (NGO) from
around the world nominated over 20 offenders for the 2006 Public
Eye Awards. Among the nominees are such corporations as Alcoa,
Bayer AG, Chevron Corp., Citigroup Inc., The Coca-Cola Company, FILA,
GAP Inc., Nestlé S.A., Novartis and other Basle-based chemical
firms, Tesco plc, Vattenfall Europe and The Walt Disney Company. For
each of the three categories Environment, Social Rights (Human and Labor
Rights) and Taxes, the Public Eye organizers have chosen
a winner whose environmental or business misconduct stands out. In addition,
aPositive Award will be given for the first time, and further
surprises are being planned.
Ceremony program and complete nominations available
at http://www.evb.ch/en/f25000722.html
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