2007 Roger Award’s Eight Finalists Named
Three Golden Oldies, Five Newbies
The finalists for the annual Roger Award For the Worst Transnational Corporation Operating in Aotearoa/New Zealand in 2007 are (in no particular order of preference):
Telecom
Spotless
Pike
River Coal
ANZ
British American Tobacco
(BAT)
Independent Liquor
APN News &
Media (ANM)
GlaxoSmithKline
Telecom is the only transnational corporation (TNC) to have been a finalist every year since the Roger Award started a decade ago – although it’s actually only ever won it once. This year, nominators (and a lot of its customers and media) were particularly incensed by the incredible cockup it made of changing its Xtra e-mail customers to Yahoo! BAT has also been a perennial finalist, although never a winner – it just keeps on finding new ways to sell and promote a product which kills up to 5,000 New Zealanders a year. Likewise, ANZ has been a finalist before but never a winner. Specifically one of the reasons it is a finalist because of its very shabby role in the ongoing saga of the collapse and takeover of Feltex. It has already won one “prize” as a result – the Shareholders’ Association’s annual Golden Glob Award.
This year’s eight finalists are not the same old same old – five are newbies: Spotless, Pike River Coal, Independent Liquor, ANM, and GlaxoSmithKline.
Spotless was nominated because of its heartless action in locking out hundreds of low paid hospital workers for nine days. Pike River Coal because of the sheer inappropriate nature (not to mention environmental damage) of opening a new major coal mine at the same time as the country is having to face up to the reality of global warming caused by burning fossil fuels. Independent Liquor is there because of its ruthless anti-worker, anti-union actions in the past year. ANM for much the same reason, specifically for contracting out its sub-editing work and making its own staff redundant in the process. Finally, GlaxoSmithKline because it was fined more than $200,000 after being caught out by two high school girls who proved that, for decades, it had made false claims about there being Vitamin C in Ribena.
The
criteria for judging are by assessing the transnational (a
corporation which is 25% or more foreign-owned) that has the
most negative impact in each or all of the following
categories:
Economic Dominance -
Monopoly, profiteering, tax dodging, cultural
imperialism
People -
Unemployment, impact on tangata whenua, impact on women,
impact on children, abuse of workers/conditions, health and
safety of workers and the public, cultural
imperialism
Environment -
Environmental damage, abuse of
animals
Political interference -
Cultural imperialism, running an ideological
crusade
The judges are: Laila
Harre, from Auckland, National Secretary of the National
Distribution Union and former Cabinet Minister; Anton
Oliver, now of France, former All Black
and environmentalist; Geoff Bertram, from
Wellington, a Victoria University economist; Brian
Turner, from Christchurch, President of the Methodist
Church and social justice activist; Paul Corliss,
from Christchurch, a life member of the Rail and Maritime
Transport Union and Cee Payne-Harker, from Dunedin,
Industrial Services Manager for the NZ Nurses’
Organisation and health issues activist. The winner(s) will
be announced in March 2008 at an event in
Christchurch.
The Roger Award is organised by
the Christchurch-based groups Campaign Against Foreign
Control of Aotearoa and GATT Watchdog.
Good luck to all the finalists. And may the worst man win!
Murray
Horton
for the organisers
CAFCA
Campaign
Against Foreign Control of Aotearoa
www.cafca.org.nz