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Alex Frei spricht über Hannover, die Nati und mehr: «Früher hatten die Medien mehr Stil»

Blick.ch - Mon, 11/25/2019 - 01:14
Alex Frei (40) gilt als grosses Trainer-Talent. Hier spricht er über die Absage an Hannover 96, wofür er stehen soll, wie er die Nati sieht und was ihn an den Medien heute stört.
Categories: Swiss News

European coal power output sees ‘unprecedented’ decline

Euractiv.com - Mon, 11/25/2019 - 01:00
Electricity production from coal is on track to fall by around 3% globally in 2019 – the largest drop on record – with Western European countries leading the charge, according to fresh data published on Monday (25 November).
Categories: European Union

Hongkong: «Demokratischer Tsunami": Demokraten mit Erdrutschsieg in Hongkong

Blick.ch - Mon, 11/25/2019 - 01:00
Das pro-demokratische Lager hat bei den Bezirkswahlen in Hongkong breite Rückendeckung der Bevölkerung erhalten und einen klaren Sieg errungen. Sie werden damit die Kontrolle der Mehrheit der Bezirksräte der chinesischen Sonderverwaltungszone übernehmen.
Categories: Swiss News

Theater: Zehnstündiges Spektakel gewinnt österreichischen Theaterpreis

Blick.ch - Mon, 11/25/2019 - 00:45
Bei der Verleihung des österreichischen Theaterpreises Nestroy ist das zehnstündige Antiken-Spektakel "Dionysos Stadt" der Münchner Kammerspiele als "Beste Aufführung im deutschsprachigen Raum" ausgezeichnet worden. Auf den Preis gehofft hatte auch das Theater Basel.
Categories: Swiss News

USA: Kontroverse um Elite-Soldat: Chef der US-Marine muss gehen

Blick.ch - Mon, 11/25/2019 - 00:26
Die Kontroverse um einen von US-Präsident Donald Trump unterstützten Elite-Soldaten kostet den zivilen Leiter der US-Marine seinen Job. Verteidigungsminister Mark Esper habe Richard Spencer um dessen Rücktritt gebeten, teilte das Pentagon am Sonntagabend mit.
Categories: Swiss News

Janza Kata és Dolhai Attila karácsonyi koncertje Komáromban!

Bumm.sk (Szlovákia/Felvidék) - Sun, 11/24/2019 - 23:55
Különleges karácsonyi koncert Dolhai Attila és Janza Kata előadásában.

Pharma: Novartis will US-Firma Medicines für 9,7 Milliarden Dollar kaufen

Blick.ch - Sun, 11/24/2019 - 23:45
Der Schweizer Pharmakonzern Novartis will die US-Biotechnologiefirma The Medicines Company für 9,7 Milliarden Dollar übernehmen. Das hätten die Spitzen beider Unternehmen einstimmig beschlossen, teilte Novartis am Sonntagabend in Basel mit.
Categories: Swiss News

Roumanie: le pro-européen Iohannis réélu à la présidence

Euractiv.fr - Sun, 11/24/2019 - 23:45
Le libéral Klaus Iohannis a remporté dimanche un second mandat présidentiel en Roumanie, infligeant à la gauche une défaite historique qui marque la volonté des électeurs de défendre l'Etat de droit et la lutte contre la corruption.
Categories: Union européenne

Global Clothing Brands Should Respond to the #MeToo Mandate

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Sun, 11/24/2019 - 23:38

Credit: Obaidul Arif/IPS

By Aruna Kashyap
Nov 24 2019 (IPS)

It has been two years since #MeToo went viral, and it’s about time the garment industry’s sexual harassment problem got the attention it deserves. Clothing and footwear brands can do much more to prevent and address gender-based violence in their supply chains, but first they need to confront how badly their inspection or “social auditing” programs fail women.  

Clothing brands or factories often bring in social auditors to examine factory working conditions. But social audits primarily rely on in-factory interviews with workers who may fear retaliation, often leaving them  ineffective for detecting workplace sexual harassment.

In fact,  many auditors I have spoken to have offered useful insights about the limitations of audits. Recently, I spoke to an Indonesian social auditor who shared an anecdote about a garment factory he was inspecting in central Java a couple of years ago. He found a notebook on the factory production floor, and within its pages discovered a woman worker’s anonymous note suggesting she was being sexually harassed.

Clothing and footwear brands can do much more to prevent and address gender-based violence in their supply chains, but first they need to confront how badly their inspection or “social auditing” programs fail women

The auditor’s attempts to trace the notebook’s owners and encourage workers to speak up were futile, he said, reflecting his general difficulty with documenting sexual harassment in the industry. Workers he interviewed inside factories usually gave stock or terse responses that he felt factory managers coached them to provide.

On the rare occasions that women workers testified about sexual harassment, he said, factory managers would contest it. They asked him what “proof” he had beyond the complainant’s testimony and demanded to know her name. They argued that one worker’s testimony could not justify a “finding” of workplace sexual harassment in the audit report.

In contrast, women workers who speak outside factory premises feel less anxious about retaliation, according to workers themselves, auditors that Human Rights Watch interviewed, and labor advocates.

For example, the Worker Rights Consortium (WRC), an international labor rights group, found evidence of sexual harassment after conducting off-site interviews with workers for three factories in Lesotho that supplied Levi’s, the Children’s Place, and Kontoor’s. Rola Abirmourched, one of the investigators, reported that despite routine social audits by third parties, sexual harassment in the factories was rampant.

The Lesotho investigation spurred the launch of a promising solution. For over a year, the WRC worked with factory unions and two prominent local women’s rights organizations—the Federation of Women Lawyers in Lesotho, and Women and Law in Southern Africa Research and Education Trust-Lesotho—to design a program addressing gender-based violence and harassment at work. The factory management signed a legally binding agreement with the unions, committing to implement the program.

The agreement creates an independent investigating body to look into complaints of sexual harassment in accordance with Lesotho’s laws. Levi’s, the Children’s Place, and Kontoor’s agreed to partially fund the program for two years.

This effort imparts some important lessons. For one, involving local women’s rights groups is critical, considering the garment industry’s gender imbalance: the majority of union leadership is male even though the garment workers themselves are predominantly women.

It’s also important to recognize the important role that unions and nongovernmental organizations can play in developing training programs, providing legal services, and facilitating access to counseling for gender-based violence and harassment.

The anti-retaliation protections, the legally binding nature of the program, and support from brands were key to the program’s success, said Libakiso Matlho, national director of Women and Law in Southern Africa Research and Education Trust-Lesotho. Programs by women’s rights groups to combat sexual harassment are often undercut by factories’ retaliation or failure to hold perpetrators accountable.

Global brands would be smart to take heed of how the Lesotho agreement incorporates key features of the landmark treaty against violence and harassment at work adopted by the International Labour Organization earlier this year. Under the Lesotho agreement, for example, the factories’ policies against gender-based violence and harassment also apply to its suppliers and third-party contractors. The agreement has strong anti-retaliation protections as well.

As garment workers struggle to find dignity at work, global clothing brands should institute strong worker-driven prevention and response programs that bring together credible local women’s rights groups and local unions, instead of depending on social audits. Brands can curb abuse by developing programs that truly empower workers.

Aruna Kashyap is senior counsel in the women’s rights division of Human Rights Watch. 

 

The post Global Clothing Brands Should Respond to the #MeToo Mandate appeared first on Inter Press Service.

Categories: Africa

Fermeture de la frontière algéro-marocaine : Tebboune dit tout

Algérie 360 - Sun, 11/24/2019 - 23:37

Le candidat à la présidentielle du 12 décembre, Abdelmadjid Tebboune a évoqué, ce dimanche au forum d’El Hiwar, « le dossier algéro-marocain ». « Les relations algero-marocaines seront revues dans le cas où le Maroc présente ses excuses au peuple Algérien, qu’il a accusé d’être le commanditaire de l’attentat perpétré en 1994 dans l’hôtel Asni à Marrakech, et […]

The post Fermeture de la frontière algéro-marocaine : Tebboune dit tout appeared first on .

Categories: Afrique

Maintien de la paix et contreterrorisme en Afrique. L’ONU s’efface, l’UE se renforce (JP Lacroix)

Bruxelles2 - Sun, 11/24/2019 - 23:30
(B2) Jean-Pierre Lacroix, secrétaire général adjoint aux opérations de paix des Nations unies, est enthousiaste avec les contributions des Européens aux missions de maintien de la paix des Nations Unies. Pour lui les missions européennes sont également cruciales, surtout alors que celles de Nations Unies cherchent à se redéfinir... Le secrétaire général adjoint était en audition […]

Cet article Maintien de la paix et contreterrorisme en Afrique. L’ONU s’efface, l’UE se renforce (JP Lacroix) est apparu en premier sur B2 Bruxelles2.

Categories: Défense

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