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| Heineken remains the Dutch student’s favourite potential employer |
The Dutch brewer Heineken is suspending the use of ‘beer
girls’ in Mozambique due to allegations of sexual harassment from customers, it
emerged on Friday.
Following a investigation by journalist Olivier van Beemen
and allegations of widespread sexual abuse of female beer-selling staff
published by the NRC Handelsblad in March, Heineken pledged to respond.
On
Friday it published independent research by Partner Africa showing that 13
sales staff complained of sexual abuse from customers in Mozambique and there
were ‘revealing short skirts’ in three countries, Mozambique, Kenya and Uganda.
It has introduced a new code of practice for its third party partners, who
employ the women to sell the beer to bars and restaurants in Africa, including
safe working practices and ‘decent uniforms’.
‘Prostitution’
Around 15,000
women work for the Dutch firm as sales staff across the world to promote the
beer to businesses in their region, according to internal research from 2007.
NRC had claimed many were sexually propositioned or assaulted and said some
prostitutes combined beer promotion with their Heineken work, to get more
clients for both. No evidence of links with prostitution was reported by the
Partner Africa investigation.
But the Amsterdam-based brand was under pressure
from other businesses, including the Global Fund international health
organisation, which had suspended its partnership with Heineken and urged it to
protect women beer promoters from sexual exploitation.
‘Unacceptable’
A
spokeswoman for Heineken told DutchNews.nl the issue has its full attention:
‘It is our responsibility to always aim to ensure brand promoters have safe
working environments,’ she explained. ‘Our operating company in Mozambique will
not carry out any further promotional activity involving brand promoters until
they can be assured the agencies they work with are compliant with Heineken
policies. If this can’t be assured, we will no longer work with these agencies
or deploy brand promoters.
She pointed out that the sales ‘brand promoters’ are
mostly employed by third party agencies, which is it now working with ‘to
ensure the industry takes a more proactive and robust approach to the promotion
of products in Mozambique.’
‘As we have said from the beginning, it is
unacceptable that people who promote our brands feel unsafe or are being
harassed during their work.’

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