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January 2000, Nike and the Olympics in Australia in 2000
Written by Tim Connor of Community Aid Abroad on the NIKE-INTERNATIONAL
mailing list
In 1998 the Sydney Organising Committee for the Olympic Games (SOCOG)
agreed, after negotiations with the Australian Council of Trade
Unions, to adopt a code of labour practice for the production of
goods carrying the Sydney Olympics logo (basically as a result of
trade union pressure on the Labor government here in New South Wales).
This year the ACTU and the TCFUA (Textile, Clothing and Footwear
Union of Australia) have been running a media campaign trying to
pressure SOCOG to implement that code (release the addresses of
relevant factories and allow Australian union officials to work
with local union groups to monitor conditions in the factories-
in particular to check whether workers can form unions). They have
had some success in this, earlier this year, BONDS (one of the suppliers
of Olympic uniforms) agreed to allow unions in their factories and
to allow Fijian union officials to visit the factories. I met an
academic who acts as an advisor to the new Fijian Labor Government
(Satendra Prasad) at a conference a week or so ago. He was very
positive about this - 6,000 workers are affected and they have already
managed to negotiate a 30% wage increase for those workers.
With Nike recently having become a sponsor, and now providing the
outfits for the Australian Olympic Team and (several thousand) Olympic
Volunteers, there is considerable scope (based on the likely media
interest) for the ACTU and TCFUA to push SOCOG to get the addresses
of factories which will be producing this gear and to then create
pressure for SOCOG's code to be implemented there. The TCFUA had
an initial meeting with Nike two weeks ago, in which it emerged
that a lot of the Nike officials didn't know about SOCOG's code
and SOCOG had probably neglected to tell them. On an overall scale
the number of factories affected is small - it will be something
like an Australian version of the campaign on US colleges - looking
for victories in terms of a smaller percentage of factories which
will hopefully move the issue forward in terms of the factories
as a whole. It should also provide scope to put a lot of media pressure
on Nike in Australia regarding their overall factory conditions.
It's more a task for Australian groups than the movement as a whole
though.
Tim Conner wrote a paper on SOCOG's code in September 1999. Please
let him know if you'd like a copy at : tconnor@one.net.au
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