Wednesday, October 16, 2013

The ethical fashion maze

Lost? Confused? If we work together we'll find a way through



This post has been written to mark Blog Action Day, which falls on October 16 each year. The idea is for bloggers all over the world to come together and focus on a single theme. This year it is human rights. To learn more about the event, please click on the links in the panel on the right.

We want to look good. We want to be able to ring the changes. We want to dress on a budget. Where do we shop? Primark? Matalan? Asda?

We have a little more money. We want to look stylish. Where do we shop? Zara? Gap?

We like sport - or to look sporty. The bank of Mum and Dad is willing to fork out. Where do we shop? Nike? Adidas?

We want to make sure that our clothes are ethically produced. Where do we shop? None of the above?

It's easy to point the finger at Western brands and assume they are all cavalier about the safety of the workers who produce their clothes and shoes.

Many take it for granted that if it's cheap it's probably been made in a sweatshop, if it costs a pretty penny then it's more likely to have been ethically sourced.

Not so. Price is no guide to the quality of life enjoyed (or suffered) by the girls at the sewing machines.

Do we look to see if they have signed up to the fire and safety accord drawn up to try to prevent a repeat of the blaze that killed more than a thousand people at the Rana Plaza factory complex in Dhaka in April? Well it may be a start, but that accord applies only to Bangladesh. And some of those who didn't sign had their own arrangements in place.


So how are customers supposed to make their decisions?

After the Rana Plaza disaster SubSist suggested the introduction of a little red sewing machine symbol to indicate that workers' conditions met a certain agreed level. Not being an expert, SubSist could not suggest what the criteria should be, but hoped campaigners, brands and manufacturers could come up with a benchmark.

How naive. The idea was popular, but there were too many complications. Too many inspection regimes, too many different campaigns, too many countries with different issues.

It would be nice to think that it is still a viable notion in the longterm, but in the meantime, let's look at what's going on in the Far East.



Bangladesh is seen by many as the top priority, largely because of the Rana Plaza tragedy and the failure of Western companies to come through with proper compensation for the survivors and families of the dead.

Another fatal fire this week reinforces that idea. Ten were killed in the blaze at a knitting factory on the outskirts of Dhaka, which fortunately started after most of the 3,000 workers had gone home. The fire has been blamed by some on a faulty knitting machine that had caught alight more than once before.

Orders from Gap, Next, H&M and Carrefour were found in the wreckage. H&M and Gap both said they had dealings with the factory's parent company, but that they had not placed orders with the plant that caught fire.

See the problem? Quite apart from responsibility for safety at the site, is the owner - the giant Palmal Industries - at fault for passing orders down the line without informing the customer or is the brand at fault for failing to check the entire supply chain?

Bangladesh has an enormous clothing manufacturing industry with about four million people working in  100,000 factories around Dhaka. Their efforts account for 80% of the country's exports, which were worth about $20bn last year. It also has the lowest wages. The Government (which inevitably includes factory owners, given the size of the sector) has agreed to lift a law banning unions from clothing factories. But while that's an advance, it's no panacea.

Cambodia strikers. Photograph: Nicolas Axelrod/Getty Images AsiaPac
In Cambodia, workers at the Singapore-owned SL factory have been on strike since August in a fight for higher wages and a food allowance. There have been riots, fires, and military police have been standing guard at factories. It is not a happy scene.

The strikes have twice been declared illegal and the unions are afraid that SL will shut down the plant, reopen under another name and then make sure that activists are debarred when rehiring workers. The owners say everything was hunky dory for a decade before the unions moved into the plant.

Well, that's a matter of opinion. Cambodian factories seem to be prone to a strange phenomenon known as 'mass fainting'. The union says this has been an issue since the early 90s. Hundreds of workers have been known to faint at the same time in some factories. What? Why?

A report called Shop 'Til They Drop published jointly last month by the Community Legal Education Center and Labour Behind the Label found that a third of the 95 workers they met were malnourished and a quarter of them were dangerously emaciated.  We don't know how the sample was chosen, so there is always a possibility that the most vulnerable were put forward.

The report concluded that low wages were at the root of the problem - the workers had little money to buy food and little time to eat it, since they were working long hours of (often compulsory) overtime.

The notion was pooh-poohed by the secretary-general of the Garment Manufacturers' Association, Ken Loo. 'I think it's ridiculous to claim that workers don't have the financial ability to feed themselves,' the Phnom Penh Post quoted him as saying. 'They can afford mobile phones, but they can't afford to eat properly? Something doesn't add up to me.'

Ah, mobile phones. We'll come back to them in a bit.

But first the rest of Loo's remarks are interesting. The minimum wage is $80 per month - and you can bet few are paid more than that - but Loo says that with bonuses and overtime, most workers earn $150 - which happens to be what the joint study suggests was a living wage for a single person. So here's a primary school maths question:

If a worker is paid $80 for a 40-hour week, how long must he or she work to earn $150?

According to a report by Worker Rights Consortium,  Cambodian workers' wages have declined by 22 per cent in real terms between 2001 and 2011, compared with a 2% fall in Bangladesh. Over the same period wages in China doubled, those in Vietnam went up by 28% and those in India rose by 39% - all in real terms.

Loo's organisation has an explanation: the need to maintain a 'competitive edge'. It is, after all, by far the country's biggest export sector, employing more than 600,000 people. As with Bangladesh, the clothing factories account for 80% of  overseas trade. The World Economic Forum estimates that the trade was worth $4.5bn last year and reports that five new factories are opening every month.



If the strikes and the fainting and the rivalry with Bangladesh weren't enough to contend with, a UN-backed organisation is stirring the mix. The International Labour Organisation's Better Factories Cambodia announced last month that from January it would be publishing online information on how factories fare in meeting safety and welfare standards on 21 different measures.

Better Factories has been conducting unannounced inspections since 2001 and its findings were published in line with a trading agreement between America and Cambodia. Once that pact came to an end, so did the publication of inspection results.

The announcement of the 'name and shame' policy three weeks ago enraged the garment manufacturers - who declared that it would drive business out of the country to cheaper rivals such as Bangladesh. They also said that if Better Factories inspectors turned up they would be accompanied round the plants by government officials. But all the time the factory owners insisted that they were all for greater transparency on working conditions.

So the ILO group are the goodies here? Well, not in everyone's eyes. Critics point to the dramatic decline in wages under its watch. And the rather complacent video above doesn't exactly inspire confidence.



The SL workers' fears that their factory could be closed peremptorily may seem melodramatic to people in stable employment in the West, but ethical sourcing campaigners will hardly need reminding about the 2,800 PT Kizone factory workers in  Indonesia, who were thrown out of their jobs without pay at the beginning of 2011.

The factory made quality college and sportswear which sold all over the world, particularly in America. But the workers were not paid in December 2010 and then the factory owner disappeared. Buying agents called Green Textile took over the plant in February and signed agreements with the local union to pay some of the money owed. Kizone was declared bankrupt in April and the factory closed.

In July, Nike offered just over $500,000 to the workers and in November Dallas Cowboys also agreed to put up some money so that, including the Green Textile funds, a pot of $1.6m was available to the workers. Sounds a lot - but it came down to $21 per worker.

The following March a bankruptcy judge awarded the workers around $500,00 - but that was immediately contested by other creditors and was mired in Supreme Court litigation.


In April, a year after the factory closed, the union wrote to Adidas to ask it to fulfil the obligations of its contract with Kizone and pay the workers the remaining $1.8m severance they are owed. Further letters followed without result and in June, campaigners in Europe and Indonesia organised protest days to coincide with the Euro 2012 football championship. The company (which sold 900,000 shirts during the competition) responded immediately with a spectacular own goal, offering the workers food vouchers - a gesture rejected as an insult.

The workers were particularly affronted because they said they were seeking only a fraction of the money Adidas was investing as a prime sponsor of the London Olympics. Just before the Games opened,  the company's chief executive Herbert Hainer told Margareta Pagano of the Independent that it had spent £100m on sponsorship, advertising and marketing for the event. The Gamesmakers were all clad in Adidas and it was the only sportswear brand allowed to have its logo on its merchandise.

Pointing to protesters outside the Olympic Park, Pagano asked Hainer about claims that the company did not pay the people who made Adidas goods enough to feed themselves. He replied:
"It's completely false. It's a lie. We pay double the local rate for our workers – and we have assembly and manufacturing in many, many countries around the world where we work with non-governmental organisations on meeting the local rates and conditions." 
He also said that Adidas had twice offered to talk to War on Want, but had received no response. War on Want did, however, have a public response for the company with a giant projection near the Park once the Games were under way.




In September American universities started to put the heat on Adidas and Cornell broke off its contract with the company. Over the following months, 17 colleges followed suit. Once again the company offered food rather than money, and was once again rebuffed.

International weeks of action, Facebook protests and a disrupted fashion show added to the pressure and in April - two years after the Kizone factory closed - Adidas finally agreed a confidential deal to give the workers their severance pay.

Adidas achieved record sales on the back of Euro 2012 and the Olympics, although the sheen was taken off the figures by falling demand for its Reebok products. If the Reebok losses were discounted, the company's profit rose by 29% to 791m on sales that were up nearly 12% at 14.8bn

The battle to get Adidas to pay up was detailed this week in an annual review from the Clean Clothes Campaign.  There have been other successes, but it still points up continuing struggles against extortion, intimidation and dangerous working conditions in Indonesia, Turkey, Bangladesh, China, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.

There are also still worries about the use of child labour, particularly in India. They may not be in the factories - but the children who spend their days sewing at home aren't doing it for fun. And then there is the prospect of a new kid on the block.

A Rangoon garment worker: the industry is growing but factories are not up to standard

With the end of trade sanctions and the release of Aung San Suu Kyi, Burma is looking for a way to escape from poverty - and garment manufacture is seen as the ideal route. There is an abundance of labour, the work requires minimal skills - 'Workers just need eyes and hands that work, that's all,' one factory owner told the Cambodia Daily.

It looks like another tragedy waiting to happen. An American expert who was taken on a tour of factories by the country's garment manufacturers association noted underage apprentices, dangerous machinery, inadequate lighting and excessive overtime. 'There's not a single factory I saw that would pass compliance.' Oh dear.

How do we, the concerned consumers, work our way through this maze? One way is to look at what our shops are doing. M&S is using mobile phone technology to get first-hand reports from more than 20,000 workers in India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh. Factory owners are kept informed, but the workers give their opinions anonymously. And the use of phones means those who can't read or write are not denied a voice. It's a start. But not a global solution.

All of which seems to suggest that it's impossible to dress ethically. If we boycott Primark et al, then people who depend on the company for their meagre incomes will see their living standards deteriorate further. The manufacturers argue that the Western shops will not pay more and that they screw the factories down to the lowest margins. But if the shops did pay more - and, naturally, pass the extra expense to us - would that extra money find its way into the workers' pockets or merely increase the factory owners' profits?


A remnant can become a boob tube
Steal Mum's old cardi from the attic


So here are a few suggestions:

1: Where possible, buy from shops that have been able to track the whole supply chain and can guarantee working conditions.

2: If travelling, try to buy from the individuals who make the goods you want rather than from markets or stores.

3: Shed the guilt about buying from chain stores. Just limit what you buy. Don't get suckered into going for a 'bargain' that you don't really need.

4: Don't be too proud to buy from charity shops, boot sales, ebay. But choose topnotch labels that you can trust, not an even cheaper Matalan T-shirt.

5: Create your own style. Rootle around in the attic. Go to retro shops and vintage fairs. Mix and match a quality piece bought second hand with that cheap shirt or vest. 

6: Get to grips with the sewing machine and make your own clothes.


Fifties style from vintage market £15
1970s Richard Shops dress(£30)
plus grandmother's 1930s handbag

And even on the biggest day of your life, you can still look stunning in a vintage number picked up from a charity shop and altered just for you. Good luck.


This is the fifth post on the state of the clothing manufacturing industry. They can all be found on the SubSist blog by looking at the archive list on the right, or you can see them in chronological order on the sister blog SubScribe.



Guest blog: Don't blame the customer


As part of Blog Action Day Fashion Mob founder, Esther Freeman, explains why it’s dangerous to  point the finger of blame at consumers for human rights abuses by the fashion industry. 


Since the collapse of the Rama Plaza building in Bangladesh, the media has been full of discussions and head scratching about fashion. One comment that keeps coming up is the responsibility of consumers around fast fashion. 


Quite frankly this is nonsense. Furthermore it is dangerous to suggest so. 


All too often high street chains whine about how hard it is for them to improve human rights, and how they’d change but consumers don’t want it. It’s become their get-out clause. And by saying consumers have some kind of responsibility, we reinforce that myth. 


It also overlooks that slavery, poverty and disaster happen at the higher end of the fashion too. There have been several campaigns against Adidas and their refusal to compensate workers and pay a living wage. And designer brands like Dolce & Gabbana have been in the firing line too. 


In an interview for the film Apparel Truth, a trade union leader in Bangladesh is very clear where the responsibility lies. He said: “The main profit from this business is going to the multi-national company…The multinational company is putting pressure on the local business to pay a living wage. But also the multinational company is putting pressure on the local business to reduce their price.” 


So let’s point the finger where it should be pointed – at the global brands who create human rights abuses as fast as they create fashion. 


That’s not to say consumers have no role to play in creating change. People power is incredibly important. That’s why we launched The 1% Campaign. 


The campaign calls on the fashion industry to invest 1% of their profits in solving issues in their supply chain, especially around human rights. 


We need more time and investment in activities like better auditing, health and safety training and improved working with NGOs and trade unions at local level. Consumers are in a powerful position to demand this. And if we all work together we can help bring about a solution.


Sign the 1% Campaign petition and demand that multinationals take responsibility for what happens in their name.





Guest blog: Don't feel guilty

Global Poverty Project Ambassador Alice Vickers urges shoppers to keep up the pressure on brands for real transparency

You just made me feel really guilty,’ said one of my colleagues as she passed my desk the other day.

‘Sorry, what?’ I had no idea what I’d done.

‘You know, with that survey, it forces you to think...’.

This was typical of the reactions I had this summer when asking people to fill in their See Through Fashion survey. I admit this was my initial reaction, too. Embarrassing though it is, given that I think of myself as a pretty ethical and informed person, I’ve generally tried not to think much about where my clothes are made, by whom and in what conditions.

I’ve avoided questioning these issues, not only because of the nagging suspicion that I’d be unlikely to like the answers, but also because I’ve had no idea how to get the answers or if I got them what I could actually do.

This lack of information has characterised the majority of the discussions that I’ve had with people who have completed the survey. Friends, family and colleagues have provided a pretty resounding chorus of ‘We have no idea where or how our clothes are produced or which companies treat workers fairly. We don’t know how to find this out and we try not to think about it; it makes us feel guilty’.

Summarising these reactions here seems to present quite a damning picture of my nearest and dearest, but that’s really not the case. There was also an overwhelming sense that when challenged to think about issues, like working conditions in the clothing industry in Bangladesh, people really do care.

My survey respondants want UK clothing companies to be more transparent about their supply chains, working conditions and wages. The people I spoke to are genuinely concerned about workers not receiving a living wage and working long hours in unsafe conditions. Many expressed a desire for companies to take social responsibility for their workers, wherever in the world these workers live.

And why on earth shouldn’t they?

Companies have reaped the benefits of globalization and need to accept the responsibilities. Safe working conditions, a decent minimum wage and freedom of association are human rights.

We’re all humans so we’re all equally entitled to have our human rights respected. To suggest differently makes me think of the satirical quote from Animal Farm ‘All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others’. It just doesn’t make sense.

Bangladeshi clothing workers employed by British companies should work in safe conditions, be paid a decent wage and have the right to join trade unions. Some of my survey respondants raised different and interesting points.

One friend asked ‘What about people living below the poverty line in the UK, don’t they need cheap clothes?’ No one in the UK lives below the extreme poverty line. Any of the 4 million clothing workers in Bangladesh earning the average wage and responsible for a child lives below the extreme poverty line.

Another friend said he had an ethical quandary, ‘If I stop buying clothes probably produced in unfair conditions, am I taking money out of developing world economies? Won’t this cause additional suffering for workers, who’ll be paid even less or laid off?’ My answer is that trade should lift people out of extreme poverty not trap them in it. The issues he raises might not exist if there was transparency and if people paid just a little bit more.

Everyone I spoke to, and 74% of all survey respondants, said that they would pay more for clothes if there was a guarantee that workers were fairly paid and conditions safe. Companies must take responsibility, but we all need to take personal responsibility. We’ve reaped the benefits of globalisation, too.

The Rana Plaza factory disaster in Bangladesh helped to reveal the unacceptable conditions in which some clothes are produced. We need to harness our collective revulsion at this tragedy as a force for change. Support See Through Fashion to demand that British companies including Arcadia, River Island, Matalan, Peacocks and Sports Direct sign the Bangladesh Workers’ Safety Accord by  October 24.

The accord is a legally binding agreement which, among other things, provides consequences for unsafe factories and compels companies to publish their supply chains.

People feel guilty when there’s a violation of a moral standard. The survey makes us feel guilty because we know the exploitation of those who make our clothes is wrong.

By taking action with See Through Fashion together we can achieve safe working conditions for the 4 million clothing workers in Bangladesh and a minimum wage to lift them out of extreme poverty.






Friday, September 27, 2013

A charter for real-world feminists


We don't hate men, we're all human, we all have rights


I'm standing at the bar in conversation with two friends, one male, one female. I'm speaking. Another man joins the group and immediately starts talking to my male friend. He is all smiles and bonhomie, but his jolly remarks about Spurs - accompanied by a dig in the ribs - are intended for one pair of ears only.

My friend looks at us in embarrassment and raises his eyebrows.

Maybe the interloper doesn't know who we, the women, are - even though we have worked together for decades.

Fair enough. We all work on different continents, we communicate by telephone or email. But he is not sufficiently interested to seek an introduction. His face is familiar, but I need reminding who he is - after he has gone.

For his is a fleeting visit, a wasp buzzing into a happy group, causing temporary disruption before flying away.

I have acted in this scene hundreds of times. The characters and their number change, but there is one constant: It is always a man who interrupts a woman to take over the conversation and he invariably speaks to one of the men in the circle. One variation is when the incomer is more important than everyone else. Of course he doesn't mean to be rude, but he's busy and he has to grab this chap this minute before  flying off to the next TV interview or to talk to the Prime Minister.

Sorry. There are two constants. Whatever the 'reason' for this behaviour, it's always bloody rude.  Have these men never heard of the phrase 'Excuse me'?

So what should a woman do at such a time?
Back down?
Smile sweetly and say 'Hello, we haven't been introduced. I'm Jane, I was just telling David...'?
Scowl and demand 'Don't you think it's a bit rude to talk over someone like that'?
Or shout across the room: 'Have you seen this sexist f***wit? What the hell makes him think he has the right to barge in like Americans in Iraq? Come and back me up sisters, down with the patrimony'?

I tend to go for the silent disdainful glower (which is patently ineffective). Yes, I'm a coward. But I also think that life is too short to sweat the small stuff. Stand up for your rights, but don't fight attitudes you will never change.

Social sexism is irritating, annoying, cringe-making, blood-boiling. But it isn't going to kill anyone. Most sensible people - male and female - see it for the anachronism that it is.

My friend's raised eyebrows said everything. I also know that any of my male friends would have felt the same discomfort. Some - but certainly not all - might make jokes like 'what do you girlies know about football?' But that is what they are, jokes. We 'girlies' could equally say 'what do you boys know about handbags and shoes?'

When the iron gives up the ghost while the other half is in Sainsbury's, I text and ask him to buy a new one. He returns, hands me the box and says 'Happy Christmas, darling.' I reply 'Sexist arsehole.'

It's a healthy relationship. I do the ironing. He does the shopping. I do the cleaning. He does the cooking. I tend the flower (weed) borders and hack through the undergrowth. He sits on the mower and plays with power tools. He looked after the baby, I went to work. It's called a partnership.

Every marriage has its own dynamic and I appreciate my good fortune. Too many women  are downtrodden, misused or beaten by their husbands.

Attrition in the jobs market has taken a disproportionate toll on women. Many are being returned to their 'place' in the home, leaving the family short of money and the woman without the personal income that brings independence of spirit. A few have blossomed, found their entrepreneurial side and started cottage industries or founded websites. Far more have been consigned to a life of household chores and juggling family finances, a prospect so dreary for some that there are dozens of applicants for the lowest-paid part-time local admin jobs.

Then there are the thousands of women who live in fear of their fathers, husbands, brothers, sons. Women who are routinely beaten and/or raped in the one place that should be their sanctuary - their home.

Back in the world of paid work, women are still being denied the opportunity to use and express their talent. The law may prohibit discrimination, but it remains the case in practice that a woman needs to be much better than her male counterpart to win that job, promotion. challenge. It doesn't help that women cannot stand in a row shooting the breeze with the men when they need to relieve themselves.

All of these issues are important and need to be addressed - not simply by women marching in the street, but by men who must also speak up for equality and denounce mistreatment. More and more are doing so, but there are still not enough of them.

Which brings us to the dreaded F word.

To declare your feminism in the Seventies was to invite sneers and putdowns such as 'You're not one of those bra-burners, are you?' Now people are saying the same thing again - because a certain breed of feminist is stealing a disproportionate amount of attention, rather as UKIP is in the political arena. This brand of feminism is strident and intolerant.

As many Twitter users have learnt the hard way, question one and suddenly your timeline is full of  a dozen strange names telling you that you don't get the point and that you need to rethink your attitude. Then before you know it, they are having a full-blown discussion about some heinous crime perpetrated by someone you've never heard of - on your timeline.

Men who dare to venture into the debate - even to offer support and encouragement - are subjected to such foul-mouthed vitriol that it's little wonder that they now see feminists as screeching harpies.

Well I just want to say that we aren't. We all want to see the world a better place. We all want to see justice for women who are abused and victimised and taunted.

We don't all believe that we live in a patriarchy where women are deliberately done down. We don't all hate men. We don't all see AID as preferable to the conventional means of procreation. Indeed, dare I say it, some of us actually enjoy the latter.

Of course we shouldn't be complacent, of course we should try to make a difference and to work against injustice and inequality. But we have to live in the world as it is, not as we would wish it to be.

Of course we shouldn't appease or tolerate sexist men; we must stand up, show them for the idiots they are and change attitudes and preconceptions. We can also shout out about domestic violence, groping on the Tube and fight corporate discrimination. These are all offensive to all rational people. Women do not have the monopoly on indignation, and not all men are bastards.

Men and women have to live and work side by side and there is no profit to be gained by stoking up a gender war that can only make matters worse.

In my naivety, I have always believed feminism to be about equality and fair treatment for all. So, in the search for like minds, I offer below a draft philosophy for real-world feminists. If you feel the 'feminazis' are taking over, please speak out and share your thoughts.




To enjoy male and female company equally

Treat everyone you encounter - male or female, senior or subordinate - with courtesy and respect.

It is a courtesy or a compliment, not patronising, to be given flowers, to be helped with your coat and to have doors held open. Women are also capable of opening doors for men and should definitely stand their round.

There are some basic differences in what interests men and women.

It is fact, not fantasy, that women are more interested in clothes and fashion and that men are more interested in aggressive sports and machinery. This does not mean there is no crossover - of course we should have women engineers and male nurses.

Stereotyping by neanderthal buffoons needs to be challenged; ironic stereotyping in a jokey social situation needs to be laughed off.

Gentle teasing often works better than righteous indignation in preventing or curing sexism.

It is not necessary to do men down to build women up. Women need to stand up and make their case articulately and reasonably.

Women lag behind men in the 'old boys' network' field and should encourage each other to advance professionally through networking organisations.

When they do achieve positions of authority, women should beware of pulling up the ladder, leaving their sisters dangling.

Positive discrimination and quotas don't work and breed hostility.

Employers need to look at the balance of their workforce: men who appoint clones of themselves to every executive position are not only sexist, but stupid. Everyone in business needs to hear a counter view from the inside.

Banners and protests should be saved for issues that really matter: fighting against domestic violence and oppression; fighting for equal pay and equal opportunities

And remember: you can't be equal if you ask for special treatment.

My favourite cartoon of all time was a pocket cartoon (possibly by Matt Pritchett) of a protester holding a banner and leading a group of people in everyday dress.

The banner said 'March of the moderates'.
The demonstrators were chanting: 'What do we want?'
'Gradual change'
'When do we want it?'
'In due course'

It's time to move faster than that - but we don't have to be nasty in striving for change.



Tuesday, August 13, 2013

We're all on the same side


There is no excuse for child abuse - ever


The first one was in 1963 or 64. I came home from school to find a policeman friend  talking to my parents in the kitchen of the restaurant they ran in Essex. The officer had just come off duty. He looked shaken and distressed. The conversation came to an abrupt halt and he left, giving me a sad smile as he went.

Much later I learnt that he had just come from a house where he had found unattended three children aged between seven months, two and four. The eldest was sucking his thumb in a corner, the toddler was crying and  baby was lying in a cot full of excrement with flies buzzing around. His legs were broken but he felt no pain: he was dead - and had been for some time.

The court was told that the scene was like something from Belsen - a reference that meant nothing to me at that time - the parents were jailed and the surviving malnourished pair were taken into care.

For an 11-year-old from a conventional family, the whole idea was almost impossible to comprehend. How could anyone do such a thing? Why have children if you didn't want to look after them? In my naivete I thought this was a one-off, that such a thing had never happened before. How wrong, how wrong.

It was just a tiny dot on a map of child abuse, so tiny it doesn't even register on today's internet searches. Two years later one of the biggest dots was placed over Saddleworth Moor;  children snatched from the street, sexually assaulted and murdered as entertainment. Stranger danger.

At this time, though no one dared speak up at the time, hundreds if not thousands of children were being routinely sexually abused by people who were supposed to be looking after them, parents, teachers, scout leaders, care home workers, priests.

Then there were the wicked stepfathers and pseudo-stepfathers. Children taken from places of safety and happiness and returned to the mothers and their brutal partners. Children like seven-year-old Maria Colwell who was beaten and bruised, then left to suffer in agony through the night before being taken to hospital in a pram when it was too late to save her.

The list is, sadly, endless. And these are the most extreme cases. There were the children who were groped by uncles and children who were passed round so-called sex rings. Children who were filmed in their distress and dumped back on the street, sometimes alive, more often dead.

Every one had - and has - the same power to shock and appall, there is no compassion fatigue where children's safety is concerned. We have all been children, so we can identify with every victim,  remembering what we were like at their age. As mothers we know how we cherished our babies. No matter how young or apparently grown-up these victims were, no sane person would ever consider them to be at fault. And the same applies no matter how great or apparently trivial the offence against them.

A few days ago I wrote a piece on my sister blog SubScribe about the Neil Wilson case in which a prosecuting barrister described a 13-year-old sex abuse victim as 'predatory'. This is the opening paragraph:

When a man pushing 40  has sexual contact with a girl of 13 there is one person who is absolutely in the wrong. And it isn't the girl.

SubScribe is a blog about journalism and the way various parts of the media treat various stories. The point of the post was that Twitter was light years ahead in catching on to the importance of the story. The Ending Victimisation website was particularly quick off the mark in getting a petition asking the Director of Public Prosecutions to investigate the language used in court up and running before any newspaper had even reported the case.

As SubScribe, I was concerned that even when the Press cottoned on to the story, most papers reported only on the outcry and did not properly cover the court case that had prompted it.

Of course it is wrong to describe a 13-year-old girl as 'predatory' or to say that she 'forced herself' on a man against his wishes. That is taken as read. I wanted to know if these were the full quotes. I was particularly curious about the predatory bit because, contrary to most reports, she was not said to have been 'sexually predatory' but 'predatory in all her actions'. What could have been the justification for that?

Yes we know that girls can be little minxes, but we also know that adults should never take advantage of them.  As the Sometimes it's Just a Cigar blog points out today:

What type of person needs to be told that, when approached by a kid truanting from school and cadging cigarettes, it’s not good practice to buy them a whole packet? What kind of person needs to be told that it’s not good practice to encourage a needy, slightly fucked up sounding kid to form a relationship with you then break it off?  Who in the name of all that is holy would then do that in a private place, and be surprised if a previously victimized kid responds inappropriately?

Quite right. The author was not impressed by the "frankly badly written" SubScribe blog, but you can't win them all.

The blogger makes an assumption in that quote above, that the child is 'previously victimized'. And she very possibly was. It is a view shared by Marina S in her blog It's Not a Zero Sum Game.

Her latest post is devoted to the SubScribe piece, with which she takes great issue. She says that notably absent from all the reporting on the case is the fact that sexually aggressive and promiscuous behaviour in young women is often a response to trauma.

Attention seeking from predatory men is not cause of abuse, it is a symptom of prior abuse. In this sense there is every chance that the QC and the judge have committed a double and devastating injustice against this young woman.
A deeper investigation into this case, it would seem to me, would interest itself in these kinds of background details. Clearly the identity and biographical details of the young woman are not available, nor should they be; but some kind of deeper look into what, if any, details of her past were in the case would go far towards demystifying the "acting out" elements of her interactions with  Wilson and placing the comments of the judge and the QC in better context.

Exactly. Try to find the context. Try to find the detail of what was going on. Try to get to the bottom of what the court was told and by whom. Not to try to excuse the words of the barrister or the judge, but to see if there was any possible explanation for them.

The newspapers did not publish any such information, so I went back to the reporter and to the official notes of the trial to try to make sense of it. SubScribe took as read that the language was wrong, the objective was to see why the basic court reporting was so sparse and if there was information available that had not been published. The whole point was to try to find facts, not hypotheses about what Wilson might have been thinking or about the girl's history.

The trauma point is a very good one, but it had no home in the blog unless it was said in court. All we know is that the girl was 13, that Wilson is now 41. We don't even know what time of day this happened or what he does for a living. These are basic facts that are usually presented in court. Why weren't they here? Wilson could be a tramp or a high-flyer in a company Jaguar. It makes no difference which because what he did was wrong, but don't you want to know?

I'm sorry that Marina S did not like the post, but it was not intended to 'change the conversation'. It was there to examine press coverage.

She is right that 'The Times has its own child abuse agenda' is not a pretty sentence. It's not a pretty subject. Andrew Norfolk has been at the forefront of exposing cases of child abuse and delving into the background of such crimes for several years, from the Edlington killings to the sex-grooming gangs in Rochdale and Oxford. When the whole of Fleet Street and every broadcaster were chasing the Madeleine McCann story he wrote a telling piece about the neglected hunt for Shannon Matthews (who was at the time thought to have been kidnapped by a stranger) and the class distinction between the two. He is a great journalist and was awarded the Orwell Prize last year for his efforts. Yes, there is an agenda. It is to protect children.

There was nothing 'untoward, premature, not to say - ahem - hysterical' about the reaction to the Wilson case. The fact that 45,000 signed EVB's petition 'is returned to and reiterated' is not a subtle signal 'too many, too fast, they must not have known what they were talking about', but  a rather-too-repetitive statement of respect for the way that @l_wales alerted EVB and how quickly they acted.

They checked their facts, the wording of the petition was precise and unsensational and it brought an equally swift and unequivocal response from the DPP. What more could anyone ask for?

Jane Fae and Ally Fogg immediately pounced on the barrister's unacceptable language from the news agency's initial tweet, but it took the mainstream papers 24 hours to sit up and notice - and they probably would not have done so at all had not EVB spoken up.

And the answer to the not-so-rhetorical question 'celebrate or worry about kneejerk politics'?  Both. We don't need some idiot MP leaping on this and turning it into propaganda.

But first we celebrate.




Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Caroline Criado-Perez and the Twitter trolls: rape threats or teenage taunts?



Sticks and stones may break my bones, but names can never hurt me...

So we were told as children when we finally plucked up the courage to tell Mum why we had come home sullen and tearful.

'Mary said something horrid.'

'What did she say?'

We'd mutter and stammer and fiddle with our hair; anything rather than repeat the hurtful words. We knew our mums loved us and that they'd be on our side. But it was still difficult to come out with it. The insults reflected on us, not on Mary or whoever else had uttered them. There must be something wrong with us that our best friends found us so repugnant.

We have a name for it now: victim blaming. Most of us realise that someone who is beaten, raped or stabbed probably wasn't 'asking for it' or 'deserved it'.

But words are trickier.

The notion that the pen is mightier than the sword has been expressed in one form or another by great writers and leaders for five centuries. Words can liberate. They can imprison. They can delight. They can wound.

If it is hard to repeat an insult to our mother in the kitchen at home, how much harder is it to put it out there in public view for millions to see?

We therefore have cause to admire and be grateful to Caroline Criado-Perez for her courage in standing up to the Twitter trolls.

Criado-Perez had for three months been running a high-profile campaign to have a woman on a banknote. Some agreed with her that it was an important issue, others - including feminists and this blog - that it didn't matter much. Criado-Perez was not particularly welcoming of the contrary view, but she didn't declare war on those who disagreed with her.

Last Wednesday afternoon she told the Twitter world


She was  showered in congratulations from her many followers and tweeted 'thank you, thank you, thank you..' dozens of times. All seemed well.

But then appeared a tweet asking if she was the 'sad bitch' behind the campaign. She did not respond until the next morning, but when she did, the tone became decidedly darker:



Looking closely at her Twitter timeline, it seems that at first she joked about it with friends. But then she became fierce. She was not going to block offenders and pretend they weren't there. Nor was she going to change her account or leave Twitter to avoid the attacks. She was going to speak up - or rather shout the **** back. Forget the advice not to 'feed the trolls', she was going to ram the food down their necks as though they were foie gras geese.

She was also going to get the police involved and to urge Twitter to do something to protect users from  'rape threats'. Many twinkling stars of the Twitterati - including Stephen Fry, Dara O Briain, Caitlin Moran and fellow columnists Suzanne Moore, India Knight and Gaby Hinsliff - cheered her on and offered support. John Prescott and the Labour MP Stella Creasy also piled in, as did the historian Mary Beard, who has had more than her fair share of antisocial media insults.

Professor Beard was,of course, the Twitter star of the weekend with this little enterprise:


Twitter's head of news and journalism was bombarded with demands that the trolls be silenced  and when he locked down his account the chorus of dissent grew louder.  The mechanisms for reporting abuse on Twitter were too complicated - and too hidden.

A petition was set up to demand a simple 'report abuse' button and for changes to the definitions of violent language. It had a thousand signatures within an hour, ten thousand overnight and now stands at about sixty-five thousand. Within a day, the UK head of Twitter had set up a makeshift button for mobile apps and promised further investigation.

Meanwhile, Criado-Perez was tweeting incessantly, barely pausing to appear on radio and television, write for the New Statesman and the Independent, and give an interview to the Huffington Post, to which she contributes.

She described a 'tidal wave' of abuse and her tweets counted off the hours of her ordeal: 'ten hours of rape threats' turned into eleven, twenty-four, thirty-six, forty-eight hours and, today,  into 'the 6th day of rape threats'.

This is a taste of what has been thrown at her:

                                                                                               
 

In spite of all she had had to put up with, she was gracious and grateful to supporters, and encouraging to other women who said that she had inspired them to fight back rather than turn away from the trolls.

Some pretty hair-raising stories emerged, as did some robust discussions, notably between EK McAlpine (@whatkatie_did) and the Independent columnist Owen Jones (@owenjones84), about whether people were taking notice only because Criado-Perez was white Oxbridge and apparently middle-class.

Moran, who suggested that all the pleasant people' should boycott Twitter next Sunday and play with Google instead, drew on her experience to emphasise the scale of the abuse that could be encountered on Twitter:

A couple of hours later Jones weighed in:
Death threats? Where did they come from? Criado-Perez, who had been urging supporters to take screen shots of tweets that she might have missed,  was brought up short.

On Monday this appeared:

It was by then common currency that she was receiving 50 rape and death threats an hour.

Masked? Well, given the avatars of some of the trolls, she may have had a point. Criedo-Perez was by now talking about the threats coming in 'every second'. It probably felt like that, though the volume is not clear from her timeline,  especially as much (and probably the worst) of the abuse has doubtless been taken down.

The trolling tweets that remain are deeply unpleasant, some are obscene, but whether they constitute serious physical threats is debatable. Criado-Perez clearly thinks that they do - they would certainly unnerve me - and she is impatient with those who suggest otherwise.

 












Nor does she have much time for men who try to point out that they aren't all rapist trolls.

Anyone, male or female, who dares to suggest that Criado-Perez is taking it all  too seriously or too personally is swatted away with a brisk 'you're blocked'. The women supporting her are fervid and uncompromising, giving short shrift to anyone who comes up with what looks like a dumb question. You can only feel for Alice in this little scene:

                  

Criado-Perez is seen by some as self-serving and attention-seeking. Hardly self-serving but, as we saw in the banknote campaign, she doesn't shun the limelight. There's no sin in that - especially if it benefits a wider cause. And that is what we must hope for next.

There is a radical feminist feel to the tweets around her and in one exchange she describes herself (ironically, i hope) as a misandrist. But she does recognise male support and also that she has found herself fighting not just against misogyny but against all kinds of abuse.

Others have taken up the cudgel for free speech, and this is the issue that needs wider examination. Indeed, the Commons Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee intends to invite Criedo-Perez to give evidence to its inquiry into social media after the summer recess.

Have the petitioners considered the consequences of a 'report abuse' button that could bring the suspension or exclusion of more people from Twitter or other such sites? Criado-Perez and her entourage, for example,  could collude to blackball gainsayers. But so, too, could  misogynists, racists, Eurosceptics, unicycle artistes, Arsenal fans.  Debate on all aspects of life on social media sites could be stifled and possibly snuffed out; no one would be able to speak up or out.

Do we want Twitter and Facebook et al to decide what can or can't be said, any more than we want Parliament to control what we print? There are laws to deal with excessive behaviour and we shall in time discover whether the tweets to Criado-Perez were so egregious as to warrant criminal charges. She will doubtless have been frightened, but has she ever been in real danger of rape or murder? We must be careful not to muddle these cyber attacks with the real violence suffered by real women in the real world every day.

Two men have been arrested, one on suspicion of threatening Criado-Perez and the other in connection with tweets to the Walthamstow MP Stella Creasy, who has been vocal in her support of Criado-Perez.

Reading Creasy's timeline is harrowing; the threats are explicit and numerous. The Tory MP Clare Perry has also reportedly been threatened because of her stance on internet pornography. The vile tweets directed at Laura Bates of Everyday Sexism were unambiguous. Abuse is now being directed at dozens, scores, if not hundreds of people - though it's not clear whether this is copycat activity or stuff that has always been going on and has only now come to light.

So has this Twitter storm blown in benefits or just more misery? Is it a real story at all or just a bit of start-of-the-silly-season nonsense? At the moment it doesn't look promising. Middle-class journalists fretting because some oiks have invaded their playground, MPs jumping on the bandwagon. There are genuine public interest issues here, but whether they will survive the sunshine and rain through to October depends on how seriously and strongly the mainstream media and the third sector take this problem. The last thing we need at the moment is David Cameron pontificating.

Caroline Criado-Perez had around 20,000 followers last week; she now has nearly 24,000.  But that is tiny compared with the Morans, the Moores, the India Knights, the Owen Joneses. These are columnists whose stock in trade is to air controversial opinions. They all know about the trolls and the hurt they can cause - as Moran says, there can be 50 tweets an hour on a bad day. Take that up through the celestial hierarchy to the likes of Stephen Fry with his six million followers and you can imagine how much bile and vitriol there is out there.

Yet none of those people, with their ready-made platforms, had stood up and said 'Enough. I'm fighting back.' None of them had seen the connection between the abuse they suffer and the cyber-bullying that drives vulnerable teenagers to suicide and proclaimed: 'We should stop this.'

No,  it is just an occupational hazard,  a matter of professional pride to put up with it and say nothing. They are as polite as they can manage before they reach for the blocking button, sigh and carry on tweeting. Any one of the footballers, pop stars, politicians and pundits could have brought the virulance and the volume of this behaviour out into the open. But they didn't.

Caroline Criado-Perez did. Her stand has made it possible for others less driven and less articulate to have their voices heard.

Sometimes it is right to raise your head and say ‘I’m a victim.’

Please check out these previous SubSist posts:

Women of Note
Three modern heroines of third-generation feminism
Twitter tigress takes on the trolls


Worth a read on this subject




Jem has also written a thoughtful piece on men's rights on his Quite Irregular blog (www.quiteirregular.wordpress.com).

  • Flashboy
  • What counts as abuse or harassment? Is it direct threats of violence only, or more general cruelty and unpleasantness? How will this be determined? What’s the boundary for legitimate argument and criticism? How should Twitter’s policies work in relation to legal frameworks; and which legal frameworks? Will moderation policies be different in different jurisdictions? Which jurisdiction has precedence when users live in different countries?
  • http://flashboy.tumblr.com



More links to follow later...










Saturday, July 27, 2013

The Twitter tigress takes on the trolls

Homage to suffragists overshadowed by barrage of rape abuse



On July 26, 1913, fifty thousand women congregated in Hyde Park to try to persuade the public and the government that women should be given the vote.

They had set out from all corners of the country up to a month before, and had held meetings and handed out pamphlets in towns and villages along the way. Some forty thousand people were in Hyde Park to greet them and listen courteously to what they had to say. A score of platforms were set up around the park and speakers, male and female, found willing converts to their cause. There were no disturbances.

On July 26, 2013, two women appeared on the radio to try to persuade the public and the government that women should be entitled to respect and to have their place in society recognised.

They had been fighting their separate campaigns - one successful, one ongoing - not in village halls, but in the new community meeting place: Twitter. Hundreds of thousands of people tuned in to the programmes, but not all wanted to hear what they had to say. One of them had to deal with some gentle mockery at the time. Later there were serious disturbances for both.

This afternoon women have again gathered in Hyde Park to celebrate that pilgrimage of a century ago. They include some who have spent the past week walking from Brighton. Others will have taken part in shorter walks around the country to show their solidarity and respect. As in 1913, there will be speakers - one of them the very woman who was mocked on the radio yesterday.

SubSist wrote yesterday that the feminist cause seemed to have regressed half a century. Why should women still have to put up with being hassled and groped as they go about their daily business?

Reading reports of the 1913 rally and the Twitter feeds of 2013,  it is clear that we have regressed not back to the 1960s, but to the dark ages.

Laura Bates had appeared on the Jeremy Vine Show to discuss her Everyday Sexism Project, which encourages people - not only women - to register verbal and physical attacks. It was particularly relevant as the day marked the end of an inspiring week-long operation in conjunction with the British Transport Police aimed out at stamping unacceptable sexual behaviour on buses and trains.

The initiative for Project Guardian had come from the BTP, in conjunction with Scotland Yard and Transport for London. Officers were trained up and ready to listen and understand and take action where necessary. It was a true landmark day and their efforts were much appreciated by women who had previously  held back from reporting incidents for fear of being fobbed off - or of making an unwarranted fuss.


Sadly, the Jeremy Vine interview did not mention that project. It quickly got bogged down in skirmishes about whether a man could approach a woman he didn't know and pay her a compliment, or kiss a woman he'd just met on the cheek in a show of gratitude. Vine seemed more concerned about establishing the boundary of what was acceptable - for the benefit of men - than about moving to the more serious issues of physical interference in the crush on the Tube.

Bates remained calm throughout.

Caroline Criado-Perez had given a number of radio interviews over the previous couple of days in which she sought to explain why she was so concerned that women should appear on British banknotes and to celebrate the confirmation that Jane Austen would be the face of the next £10 note.

Criado-Perez seems a little more volatile.

Yesterday's SubSist post pointed out the benefits of social media in getting a message across to great numbers of people quickly - as evidenced by the Everyday Sexism Project, by End Victim Blaming and by Project Guardian.

These just happen to relate to feminist issues. Twitter is also helpful in putting people who - for any one of countless reasons - are in need of support in touch with each other and with appropriate experts. Charities understand its importance and make good use of it. Leaders of the world from Obama and Putin to the Pope and the Archbishop of Canterbury tweet.

And so do the bad guys. Or, if the above four aren't to your political taste, the really bad guys.

The first set of tweets below, sent during the radio programme, are relatively mild.


But Bates has also received others that are far more menacing:





Bates appears to have ignored or blocked the aggressors. Criado-Perez fights back like a tigress. A foul-mouthed tweet is liable to illicit an equally foul-mouthed withering reply. As she says, she doesn't do silence; she will 'shout the **** back'.

Criado-Perez reports that she has been subjected to three days of rape threats and abuse since the Jane Austen £10 note decision was announced. She has contacted the police, tried to rouse Twitter authorities, and written about the experience for New Statesman, in a blogpost and apparently for tomorrow's Independent on Sunday.

It is not necessary to reproduce the tweets here, as some were in the previous post and others can be seen in the links above. Whether this aggressive abuse constitutes rape threats is a matter of debate. What is certain is that it goes way beyond 'trolling'.

This isn't a question of censorship or freedom of speech. We wouldn't tolerate tweets saying 'that nigger should be strung up on a tree' (I apologise even for writing such a thing) even if the author had no intention of doing anything other than be provocative or draw attention to themselves. So it is with the vile abuse addressed at Criado-Perez. It may be idle baiting or late-night drink talking, but it is still inciting hatred. That is against British criminal law and common sense says that it should also be outlawed by Twitter.

It is possible to set up a Twitter account so that a user receives an email or text notification whenever they are mentioned. The email messages have a panel at the bottom saying 'If you believe xxx is engaging in abusive behaviour on Twitter you may report xxx for spam.' The last four words are a hyperlink that automatically block the user.

If you do not receive such notifications, there is no easy way to report abuse. Last night Criado-Perez and many of her followers tried to contact Mark S. Luckie, Twitter's manager of journalism and news, but he sealed his account. A petition was swiftly set up calling for Twitter to incorporate a 'report abuse' button on every feed and now has some ten thousand signatures.

By this morning, the outrage had grown, with even John Prescott joining in the outcry. Half an hour or so ago the UK head of Twitter finally put his head above the parapet with this tweet:


It took seven days for Facebook to capitulate to Bates's campaign over violent images last month. It can't be hard to add a 'report abuse' element to the 'more' button that allows users to email or embed a tweet, so it will be interesting to see if Twitter - until now regarded as more user-friendly of the two giants - acts as quickly.