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Kenya’s Chebet caps stellar 2024 with women’s 5km world record

DOUBLE OLYMPIC champion Beatrice Chebet smashed the women’s 5 km (kilometers) world record with a time of 13 minutes 54 seconds at the Cursa dels Nassos road race in Barcelona on Tuesday as she finished a blockbuster year on a high.

The Kenyan beat her previous record — set a year ago to the day at the Barcelona race — by 19 seconds, becoming the first woman to break the 14-minute barrier in the event.

Chebet was all on her own as she sprinted through the race and embraced friends at the finish line after adding another accolade to her name, having won the 5,000 and 10,000 meters (m) at this year’s Paris Games.

“I’m super happy as everything went according to plan,” Chebet said in remarks provided by World Athletics. “I felt capable of running under 14 and I managed to do so. Two races in Barcelona and two world records, can I ask for more?”

The 24-year-old enjoyed a nearly flawless year, breaking the 10,000 m world record in Eugene in May before claiming her second Diamond League title in the 5,000 m in September.

Chebet said she will turn her attention to the World Championships in Tokyo in 2025, where she hopes to compete in both the 5,000 and 10,000, after picking up silver in 2022 and bronze in 2023 in the shorter distance. Reuters

30-point Giannis game propels Bucks past Pacers

GIANNIS ANTETOKOUNMPO scored 30 with 12 rebounds to lead the Milwaukee Bucks to a comeback 120-112 road win against the Pacers.

Brook Lopez added 16 points for Milwaukee, which rallied from 19 down in the second half. Khris Middleton added 15 points and Bobby Portis and Gary Trent, Jr. each scored 14.

Benedict Mathurin led Indiana with 25 points while Pascal Siakam added 20.

Tyrese Haliburton scored 12 but struggled, shooting 3-for-13 from the floor.

The first half was not pretty on the offensive front.

The Bucks struggled mightily from the field while Indiana had turnover issues.

The Pacers went on a bit of a run at the end of the second to take a 64-53 halftime lead. Milwaukee shot just 4 of 20 from deep as a team in the half.

In the third, Indiana stormed ahead. A 19-11 Pacers run to start the second half gave them a 19-point edge, their largest of the day. Then they didn’t score for four-plus minutes, opening the door for Milwaukee.

After starting 0 for 9 from the field, Damian Lillard broke through, knocking down back-to-back 3-pointers and getting the Bucks within three heading into the fourth at 91-88.

The Bucks tied the game at 99 with 7:22 left thanks to Antetokounmpo getting it going after a slow start. It was then a back-and-forth game until Milwaukee grabbed the lead at 107-104, its first lead since the opening quarter.

Gary Trent, Jr.’s clutch shooting put the Bucks out in front. The sharpshooter hit back-to-back tough 3-pointers, including one at the end of the shot clock, to give the Bucks a five-point edge with just under two minutes to play.

Antetokounmpo put the game out of reach with a jumper and a free throw. He scored 26 of his 30 points in the second half, including 13 in the fourth.

Milwaukee improved to 2-0 over Indiana this season with two more matchups coming between the division rivals. Reuters

Celtics win by 54, hand Raptors 10th straight loss

JAYSON TATUM had 23 points and eight rebounds on Tuesday as the Boston Celtics crushed the Toronto Raptors 125-71 for their 10th straight win in the all-time head-to-head series.

The loss extended Toronto’s losing streak to 11.

The Raptors, who committed 21 turnovers, have lost their last five road games and haven’t beaten Boston since the 2021-22 season.

Payton Pritchard (5 of 8 on 3-point attempts) came off the bench to score 19 for the Celtics.

Derrick White (16), Jrue Holiday (14), Jaylen Brown (12), Sam Hauser (12) and Jordan Walsh (10) also scored in double figures for Boston, which made 22 of 43 3-point attempts (51.2%). No Boston starter played more than 29 minutes.

The Celtics entered the contest with three losses in their last four games.

Scottie Barnes led Toronto with 16 points and 13 rebounds but was 1 of 8 from 3-point territory. The Raptors received nine points from Davion Mitchell, while Jakob Poeltl contributed seven points and 13 rebounds.

The Celtics scored more points in the second half (80) than the Raptors scored in the game. Toronto’s 71 points were the fewest scored in an NBA game this season.

Toronto played without R.J. Barrett (illness) and Gradey Dick (hamstring).

Kristaps Porzingis, Boston’s No. 3 scorer (18.3 points per game), missed his third straight game with an ankle injury.

Although they missed 10 of their first 11 shots, the Celtics had a 23-12 lead after one quarter. The Raptors were 5 of 23 from the field in the quarter, including 0 for 12 from 3-point range.

Toronto was within seven late in the second quarter but trailed 45-35 at halftime.

The Celtics used a 24-3 run to extend their lead to 87-51 late in the third quarter and led 90-53 entering the fourth. Boston made 10 of its 12 3-point attempts in the third, outscoring Toronto 45-18.

Boston improved to 2-0 against Toronto this season. Reuters

Lions beat 49ers as showdown with Vikings awaits

JARED GOFF threw for 303 yards and three touchdowns (TD) and the Detroit Lions defeated the San Francisco 49ers 40-34 at Santa Clara, California on Monday night.

Jameson Williams scored two touchdowns for Detroit (14-2), but the game had no bearing on the playoff picture. The Lions’ home game against the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday night, the final game of the regular season, will determine the top seed in the NFC playoffs.

Detroit running back Jahmyr Gibbs rushed for 117 yards and a touchdown on 18 carries and also gained 46 yards on four receptions.

Brock Purdy passed for a career-high 377 yards and three touchdowns and rushed for another score but was intercepted twice in the second half by Kerby Joseph. Ricky Pearsall caught eight passes for 141 yards and a touchdown in the loss.

San Francisco (6-10) led 21-13 at halftime.

The Niners scored on their first possession on Purdy’s 3-yard TD pass to Pearsall. The Lions answered with a 65-yard drive that Williams finished off with a 3-yard scoring run. The extra-point try was blocked, though, leaving the score at 7-6.

San Francisco scored again on the first play of the second quarter, a 9-yard touchdown pass from Purdy to Kyle Juszczyk.

Detroit used some razzle-dazzle for its next score.

On third-and-12, Goff connected with Amon-Ra St. Brown on a short pass. St. Brown then pitched the ball to Williams, who raced down the sideline on the 42-yard hook-and-ladder play.

The Niners got those points back less than four minutes later on Purdy’s 9-yard scramble for a touchdown.

The Lions tied the game at 21 on their first possession of the second half when Goff completed a 6-yard pass to Sam LaPorta for a TD 5:02 into the third quarter, then hooked up with Tim Patrick on a two-point conversion.

Purdy passed for 79 yards on the Niners’ ensuing drive, including a 5-yard strike to Deebo Samuel for a touchdown that made it 28-21 in favor of San Francisco.

The Lions took the lead before the quarter ended. First, Jake Bates blasted a 57-yard field goal with 4:25 remaining in the frame, then Joseph’s first interception set up Goff’s 4-yard touchdown pass to St. Brown on fourth down with 19 seconds to go.

Bates extended the advantage to six at 34-28 with his 42-yard field goal with 10:29 left in the game.

Joseph’s second interception halted the Niners’ next possession, and Gibbs’ 30-yard touchdown run with 2:58 remaining put the game away.

San Francisco backup quarterback Joshua Dobbs — who came in when Purdy was injured late — scored on a 7-yard run with 43 seconds left to make it a one-score game, but Jake Moody’s onside kick went out of bounds and the Lions kneeled out the clock. Reuters

Mexico unveils new tariffs; popular e-tailers like Shein, Temu may be in crosshairs

SHEIN.COM

MEXICO CITY — Mexico’s tax authority SAT issued new tariffs on Tuesday, which it said will strengthen the surveillance of goods from Asia, a measure that could impact popular online retailers like Shein and Temu.

Goods that enter Mexico via courier companies originating from countries that do not have an international treaty with Mexico will be subject to a duty of 19%, SAT said in a statement shared with reporters.

Mexico does not have an international treaty with China, where Shein and Temu are based.

Goods entering via courier companies from Canada and the US, which are part of the United States-Mexico-Canada trade agreement, will be subject to a 17% duty if the value is greater than $50 but does not exceed $117.

A 19% duty will also apply to goods that exceed $1 from other countries that have international treaties with Mexico, SAT said.

The tax authority said the tariffs will strengthen the “fight against abusive practices.”

Previously, countries were not required to pay duties on goods of those values, according to a SAT spokesperson.

The new measures, which go into effect on Jan. 1, come amid a slew of new tax guidelines that impact e-commerce companies, including a Dec. 19 decree by the administration of President Claudia Sheinbaum that increased import duties to as much as 35% on a swath of clothing, including dresses and shirts, home goods like blankets and curtains, as well as tents and awnings.

Officials said earlier this month that the move was aimed at preventing the importation of some products that evaded taxes, guaranteeing a level playing field for Mexican companies and protecting sector jobs.

Some industry experts have said the decree could mark a major disruption of Mexico’s IMMEX program that allows foreign companies to import goods into Mexico tax-free for manufacturing, assembly or packaging for direct sale to US shoppers.

E-commerce powerhouses Shein and Temu, which compete with US retailers like Walmart and Amazon, could be particularly vulnerable to the impacts of higher tariffs.

The decree takes effect ahead of the Jan. 20 inauguration of US President-elect Donald J. Trump, who has threatened to slap a 25% tariff on imports from Canada and Mexico. — Reuters

S. Korea crash investigation ramps up as funerals begin

RESCUE WORKERS take part in a salvage operation at the site where an aircraft crashed after it went off the runway at Muan International Airport in Muan, South Korea, Dec. 29, 2024. — REUTERS

SEOUL/MUAN COUNTY, South Korea — The investigation into the crash of a South Korean passenger jet gathered pace on Wednesday as bereaved families began to prepare funerals after authorities finished formally identifying the 179 victims of the country’s worst air disaster.

The transport ministry said South Korean investigators have extracted the data from the plane’s cockpit voice recorder and will convert it into an audio file, critical information to try to explain the few minutes that led up to the crash.

The investigation team is still working to extract the contents of the flight data recorder, which was found missing a key connector, the ministry said.

All 175 passengers and four of the six crew members were killed on Sunday when the Jeju Air jet belly-landed at Muan International Airport in the country’s southwest and slammed into a sand-and-concrete embankment at the end of the runway, where it burst into flames.

Two crew located near the plane’s tail survived the disaster.

The government has declared a national mourning period until Jan. 4 and the country will scale back New Year’s celebrations.

The transport ministry said two more US officials arrived late on Tuesday to join a team of around two dozen investigators including from the US National Transportation Safety Board, Federal Aviation Administration, and aircraft maker Boeing.

“They’re also planning to start a visual investigation into the wreckage,” Deputy Minister for Civil Aviation Joo Jong-wan told a briefing.

Officials have said investigators were expected to examine whether a bird strike, a failure of the landing gear to drop or if problems with any other control systems played a role in the disaster. 

They will also investigate the pilot’s apparent rush to attempt a landing right after he had declared an emergency, officials have said.

Air safety experts have also questioned if the airport embankment designed to prop up navigation equipment was built too close to the end of the runway.

South Korea’s acting President Choi Sang-mok on Wednesday called for a fair and objective investigation, and said funeral procedures have begun after all the victims were formally identified.

“The most urgent matter at present is to return the victims to their families,” Mr. Choi told an intra-agency meeting.

Airport authorities set up an altar late on Tuesday and on Wednesday buses carried relatives of victims to the crash site so that they could pay their respects, just meters from the crashed plane’s charred and broken tail — the only relatively intact part of the aircraft following the accident.

The Muan airport was brimming with mourners seeking to pay their tributes at the altar, leading to a queue of several hundred meters.

County officials sent an alert to urge visitors to go instead to a larger memorial set up in a sports complex about nine kilometers (five miles) from the crash site.

It could still take several days until all bereaved relatives are able to secure the release of the bodies of their loved ones. — Reuters

Russia halts gas exports to Europe via Ukraine

PHILIPPINE STAR/KRIZ JOHN ROSALES

MOSCOW — Russia’s energy giant Gazprom said on Wednesday that gas exports via Ukraine to Europe had been halted from 08:00 Moscow time (0500 GMT) as the transit deal has expired.

The shutdown of Russia’s oldest gas route to Europe ends a decade of fraught relations sparked by Russia’s seizure of Crimea in 2014.

Russia still exports gas via the TurkStream pipeline on the bed of the Black Sea.

The European Union redoubled its efforts to reduce its dependence on Russian energy after the outbreak of the military conflict in Ukraine in 2022 by seeking alternative sources.

The five-year gas transit deal between Russia and Ukraine expired in early hours of Jan. 1, while Kyiv has repeatedly said it would not extend the agreement amid the war.

“Due to the repeated and clearly expressed refusal of the Ukrainian side to renew these agreements, Gazprom was deprived of the technical and legal ability to supply gas for transit through the territory of Ukraine from January 1, 2025,” Gazprom said in a statement on the Telegram messaging app.

“Starting from 08:00 Moscow time, the supply of Russian gas for its transportation through the territory of Ukraine is not carried out.” — Reuters

Myanmar says 2024 census shows population of 51.3 mln

Flag of Myanmar | STOCK PHOTO | Image by www.slon.pics on Freepik

Myanmar said its 2024 census found a population of 51.3 million, slightly smaller than 10 years ago, as the junta prepares for promised elections amid ongoing conflict and unrest across the country, state media reported on Wednesday.

The census, which was held in October, will be used to compile voter lists for the elections planned for this year that opposition groups have widely condemned as a sham.

“I am striving to successfully organize a free and fair election, which is the ultimate goal of the State Administration Council,” junta chief Min Aung Hlaing said in his New Year speech that was published in state media.

Myanmar has been in turmoil since early 2021, when the military overthrew an elected civilian government and violently suppressed pro-democracy protests, sparking a nationwide armed rebellion.

The military is fighting rebels on multiple fronts, struggling to govern and manage a crumbling economy that was seen as a promising frontier market before the generals ended a decade of tentative democracy.

Last month, Myanmar’s foreign minister briefed neighboring countries on the junta’s progress towards holding an election, which has been widely criticized due to the absence and sidelining of opposition groups.

The 2024 population of 51.3 million was down from a 51.5 million figure in the previous census in 2014, the reports said. The country’s Muslim Rohingya minority was not included in either census.

The population figure was made up of 32.2 million people counted in the census and an estimate of 19.1 million people in areas that were inaccessible due to security and transportation issues, the reports said.

“For estimating the population … high-resolution satellite imagery (ranging from 0.3 to 0.8 meters) was acquired from commercial providers in Russia, China, India, and various European countries,” the census report said.

The census figure is lower than a estimated 2024 population of 54.5 million from the World Bank, which is based on the United Nations World Population Prospects report. The World Bank has estimated Myanmar’s population at 50.7 million in 2014. – Reuters

Taiwan president wants exchanges with China, sees lack of goodwill

TAIWAN President-elect Lai Ching-te, of Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), holds a press conference, following his victory in the presidential elections, in Taipei, Taiwan, Jan. 13, 2023. — REUTERS

 – Taiwan President Lai Ching-te said on Wednesday that he welcomed equal, dignified, healthy and orderly exchanges with China, but wondered whether there was goodwill from Beijing given what he said was their blocking of simple things like tourism.

Mr. Lai, who took office in May, has regularly offered talks with China but been rebuffed. China views democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory and detests Lai as a “separatist”. He says only Taiwan’s people can decide their future.

Speaking at a New Year’s day news conference, Mr. Lai said China was blocking normal interactions with restrictions on Chinese tourists visiting or students studying on the island, while similar bans do not apply to Taiwanese going to China.

“But I still want to stress this: Taiwan hopes to have healthy and orderly exchanges with China under the principles of reciprocity and dignity,” he said.

Journalists should ask China why its citizens can freely travel to countries like the United States and Japan, but has all these controls when it comes to Taiwan, Mr. Lai added.

“Is this really showing goodwill towards Taiwan? Can’t they treat everyone equally?”

Taiwan and China have repeatedly traded accusations about tourism and travel restrictions. In June, Taiwan told its citizens not to go to China unless absolutely necessary, following a threat from Beijing to execute those deemed “diehard” Taiwan independence supporters.

Chinese President Xi Jinping said in his New Year’s speech on Tuesday that no one can stop China’s “reunification” with Taiwan.

China’s military operates around Taiwan on a daily basis, and last year staged two rounds of war games near the island.

Mr. Lai said that the greater the threat from authoritarian countries the more democracies should unite, and pointed to China and Russia’s militaries operating together in the Indo-Pacific.

The cooperation between democracies needed to be on defense and security and strengthening the “democratic supply chain”, he said.

“If that is not done properly, it will impact economies and industries for all countries, and the lives of people in democracies,” Mr. Lai said.

“I really hope that in the New Year, democratic countries can be even more united, and achieve the aims of peace, democracy and prosperity.” – Reuters

Macron acknowledges error on early elections in New Year’s speech

FRENCH PRESIDENT EMMANUEL MACRON — REUTERS

 – French President Emmanuel Macron said on Tuesday he recognized that his decision to call early parliamentary elections in June had created more political instability in the country, in a rare moment of contrition.

The speech caps a tumultuous 2024 for Mr. Macron, who shocked the nation halfway through the year by calling early elections, a gamble that backfired when voters delivered a hung parliament with a big increase in far-right lawmakers, diluting Mr. Macron’s power.

“Lucidity and humility force (me) to recognize that at this stage, this decision has produced more instability than peace, and I fully own up to that,” Mr. Macron said in a televised address ahead of New Year’s celebrations.

“The dissolution caused more divisions in the Assembly than solutions for the French people,” he added, in the clearest mea culpa since the elections.

Mr. Macron had justified his decision to call early elections in the wake of a bad score at European elections by the need to “clarify” the political situation.

But he lost his workable majority and took two months to name a minority government, which eventually collapsed in December, the first time that happened in France since 1962.

As a result, France failed to approve a budget for 2025 before the end-of-year deadline, and Mr. Macron had to name his fourth prime minister this year, centrist veteran Francois Bayrou, in December.

 

CHOICES TO MAKE

Mr. Macron also opened the door to use referendums this year, without using the word, saying he would ask the French to decide on “decisive” issues, without elaborating which ones.

“I want us to act with 2050 in our sights. We will have choices to make, for our economy, our democracy, our security, our children,” he said.

The French constitution grants powers to the president to initiate referendums.

Mr. Macron has also used “citizen conventions”, gatherings of randomly picked citizens without any binding power, in the past to quell revolts such as the yellow vest rebellion on certain issues.

On international issues, in which he retains wide diplomatic and military powers, Mr. Macron said the European Union should stop being “naive” when it comes to international trade, as the bloc faces threats of tariffs by U.S. President-elect Donald Trump.

“We must say no to trade rules enacted by others and that we are the only ones to still comply with, say no to everything that makes us more dependent on others, without tradeoffs and without preparing the future,” he said.

He also mentioned war in Ukraine and the Middle East, and election manipulation in Georgia, Romania and Moldova, as proof Europe should not take its security for granted.

“That’s why Europe should stop delegating its security and defense to other powers,” he said, urging EU partners, who often rely on the U.S. security umbrella, to do more for their own defense. – Reuters

Puerto Rico’s power grid collapses; could take two days to restore service

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

 – Puerto Ricans were without electricity on New Year’s Eve after a grid failure left nearly all of the island without power.

Around 87% of clients were without power at 1 p.m. on Tuesday, according to a statement from energy distribution company LUMA Energy. Puerto Rico has long dealt with chronic power outages as its infrastructure crumbles.

It will likely take 24 to 48 hours to turn the lights back on, LUMA said in a statement. It added later that power had been restored to some critical facilities, including Centro Medico and Municipal Hospital in San Juan.

“While the cause of the outage is under investigation, preliminary findings point to a failure in an underground line,” LUMA said.

Ivan Baez, a spokesperson for power generator Genera, said in a local radio interview that the line believed to have failed was operated by LUMA and brought down plants belonging to Genera, as well as private generators.

LUMA did not answer direct questions about responsibility for the power lines.

Puerto Rico Governor Pedro Pierluisi said in a post on social media that LUMA and Genera “need to speed up bringing back online the generator units … and keep the people informed about the measures they’re taking to bring service back to the whole island.”

 

MORE THAN A DECADE IN THE MAKING’

Ramon Luis Nieves, 49, an attorney in San Juan, said that New Year’s Eve is typically a time for family reunions, popping champagne bottles and watching fireworks. The power outage could mute celebrations this year, he said.

“My wife and I need to figure it out,” he said. “We can’t visit my wife’s family in the dark.”

He added that he’s not surprised by the outage, especially after Hurricane Maria, a Category 4 storm that hit the island hard in 2017.

Nieves, a former senator on the island, has long been a critic of operators of the power grid.

“This disaster has been more than a decade in the making,” he said. “The (power) generators are old, long past their life expectancy and the operators have failed to properly invest for years.”

Such sentiment is common on the Caribbean island, a U.S. territory whose residents are U.S. citizens but do not have voting representation in Congress and cannot vote in presidential elections. Protesters have called for the island’s government to cancel its contract with LUMA.

In response to a 2022 protest, LUMA said it had “inherited an electrical system that suffered years, in fact decades, of abandonment.”

Steven Pacheco, a 55-year-old former lineman on the territory, was visiting for the holidays from St. Petersburg, Florida.

He said it’s frustrating for everyone to be “constantly on edge, anticipating that these emergencies could happen again.”

Jenniffer González, who takes office as governor of Puerto Rico on Thursday, said on social media that she is forming an energy task force to address the frequent blackouts.

“We cannot continue with an energy system that fails our people so often,” she wrote. “Events like this morning’s blackout and the uncertainty of a prompt restoration of power to the island continue to affect our economy and quality of life.” – Reuters

Inside luxury goods’ broken audit system

 – LVMH-owned Dior’s production arm in Italy, Manufactures Dior, relied on formal inspections to assess working and safety standards inside its supply chain last year. In some cases, such certifications missed glaring problems, a Reuters review of unpublished court documents has found.

AZ Operations, a sub-contractor of Manufactures Dior tasked with the production of leather items and based near Italy’s fashion capital Milan, was accused by Italian prosecutors in June of being a front for an operation that exploited workers.

However, AZ Operations passed two environmental and social inspections in 2023, in January and July, according to unpublished audit documents reviewed by Reuters.

Widespread Milan investigations have uncovered malpractice inside the Italian luxury goods supply chain of Dior, Giorgio Armani and Alviero Martini this year, Reuters has previously reported.

The audit papers, along with court documents, Reuters interviews with more than two dozen luxury sector workers, auditors, supply chain managers, suppliers, lawyers, industry experts, executives and trade union representatives reveal the pervasiveness of ineffective checks of social and environmental standards inside Italy’s sprawling luxury supply chain.

In the case of AZ Operations, a three-page assessment on letterhead from compliance management company Fair Factories Clearinghouse (FFC), carried out by monitor Adamo Adriano on Jan. 18, 2023, stated that AZ Operations did not have sub-contractors. The audit listed no irregularities.

In July 2023, a further audit by Davide Albertario Milano srl, a large direct supplier of Manufactures Dior that worked with AZ Operations, also found “no non-conformities” and certified the work was carried out to a high standard and in accordance with contractual terms.

Despite passing the audits, a police investigation into its 2023 activities found AZ Operations was “de facto non-existent”, according to Milan court documents. Furthermore, police inspections in April 2024 alleged the company was a front for a separate business, New Leather Italy, that exploited undocumented workers in sweatshop-like conditions, the same documents showed.

That discovery was one of the factors that prompted Milan’s prosecutors to put Manufactures Dior under court administration in June.

Dior and LVMH did not respond to multiple requests for comment about Reuters’ findings, including the audits, and on the process to inspect external manufacturers in Italy.

In a July statement following revelations from the Milan prosecutors’ inquiries, Dior said it firmly condemned illegal practices discovered at two of its contractors, saying such unworthy acts contradicted “its values and the code of conduct signed by these suppliers.”

“Aware of the gravity of the violations committed by these suppliers and the improvements to be made to its checks and procedures, the house of Dior is collaborating with the designated Italian administrator and the Italian authorities,” the French brand also said at the time.

Dior added in the statement that its teams were working intensely to reinforce the existing procedures: “Despite regular audits, these two suppliers had evidently succeeded in hiding these practices.”

After this article was published, FFC-owner Worldly responded to Reuters queries saying it had never offered facility auditing services to Worldly or FFC users, adding it asks that customers enlist external verifiers to ensure impartial, transparent audits. “Regarding the letterhead in the court documents, this is a template available to customers within the FFC platform,” Worldly added in its statement.

Adamo Adriano did not respond to Reuters attempts to reach them. Davide Albertario did not respond to queries by Reuters on inspections at AZ Operations. New Leather Italy did not reply to a Reuters request for comment.

 

“COST-REDUCTION”

Global luxury groups including LVMH usually outsource most of their production to a myriad of external contractors, industry experts say.

Many are based in Italy, famed for its artisanal skills and accounting for between 50% and 55% of the global production of luxury clothing and leather goods, consultancy Bain calculates.

“No matter how many controls we do, there is always something we miss,” Renzo Rosso, founder of Italian fashion group OTB, which makes Diesel clothing, told a business event in September, in reference to the complexity of overseeing Italy’s supply chain.

Despite the risks, insiders and experts told Reuters relying on suppliers is a deliberate strategy to keep costs down and manage demand.

“The fashion business model is driven by cost-reduction tactics, leading fashion brands to switch suppliers,” said Hakan Karaosman, Associate Professor at Cardiff University, whose research focuses on supply chain sustainability.

Even though Dior did not directly abuse workers, the mechanism of labor exploitation “was culpably fueled by Manufactures Dior srl which… did not carry out effective inspections or audits over the years to ascertain the actual working conditions and environment,” Milan prosecutors said in the June court documents.

Currently, there is no firm legal requirement in Italy for luxury groups to audit their suppliers. But poor oversight can clash with sustainability claims made to investors and consumers over craftsmanship and corporate and social responsibility standards, leading to reputational risks and in some cases civil liability if workers’ exploitation is found within the supply chain.

LVMH, for example, said in its 2023 Social and Environmental Responsibility Report it “endeavors to ensure its suppliers and their service providers uphold human rights and to support them with applying the best possible employment, health and safety conditions.”

The investigations into Italy’s luxury supply chain have prompted some LVMH shareholders to ask the $330-billion behemoth, owned by French billionaire Bernard Arnault, to better monitor how its contractors treat workers.

LVMH told a group of investors in November it was auditing all of its direct suppliers and immediate contractors. In a subsequent statement to Reuters in November, LVMH said it had conducted more than 2,600 on-site audits globally this year.

Italy’s antitrust authority said in July it was investigating whether Dior and Armani have misled consumers.

In July, Armani expressed confidence in a “positive result following the (antitrust) investigation”, saying in a statement that its companies were fully committed to cooperating with the authorities and that it believed the allegations had no merit.

 

SKIN-DEEP OVERSIGHT

Brands dictate the depth of the checks and the auditors’ scope of action and inspections are often limited to direct suppliers and not to sub-contractors, where the biggest problems usually lie, four auditors and luxury goods supply chain managers Reuters spoke to said.

Audits tend to be planned in advance, allowing suppliers to paint a better picture by, for instance, clearing premises of workers without proper contracts, these people said.

On May 9, 2023, for example, external auditor Adamo Adriano sent Pelletterie Elisabetta Yang, another supplier of Manufactures Dior based near Milan, a written notice flagging that he would hold an inspection on 26 May, 2023, the audit documents reviewed by Reuters show.

In the notice, Adriano asked to analyze employment contracts, organizational charts, pay slips and a dozen more documents.

The check-up did take place, but it was “more formal than substantial,” investigators wrote of the audit. The assessment listed no irregularities.

In March 2024, police entered Elisabetta Yang’s workshop, which housed also a refectory and several bedrooms. They found 23 workers, five of which were irregular. The workers lived and worked “in hygiene and health conditions that are below the minimum required,” the court documents read.

Adriano did not reply to Reuters requests to comment with regards to the audit of Elisabetta Yang. Reuters was not able to contact Elisabetta Yang at the official email addresses cited by the local chamber of commerce.

As private actors, auditors cannot freely access factories or workshops outside agreed hours and may not collect documents that are not spontaneously submitted by suppliers, two Italy-based luxury supply chain auditors told Reuters.

The time allocated for on-site inspections is often too short to examine documents and interview employees, these people said.

Five Tuscany-based luxury chain workers employed at separate workshops serving major brands confirmed to Reuters workshop owners knew in advance of the audits and would clear their premises and prep staff on what answers to give monitoring teams on the day of an inspection.

All declined to be named for fear of losing their job.

“We used to say we only worked four hours a day, as per our (formal) part-time contract,” said Pakistani-born Abbas, who works in the leathermaking hub of Prato.

“But how could they think we were making 1,300 bags a day with 50 workers employed only four hours a day?”, Abbas, who said he worked 14 hours a day, six days a week, added.

On the day of the audit, employees with part-time contracts were asked to leave as soon as they finished their formal shift, but had to come back and continue work after the auditors left, he added.

Another worker, also from Pakistan and employed at a separate leather workshop in the Florence area, said factory owners warned workers when the inspection would take place and asked them to lie about their working hours.

Fabio Roia, President of the Court of Milan, told Reuters that companies don’t invest enough in their control systems and don’t normally question the extremely cheap prices contractors offer to provide goods or services.

Small fashion brand Alviero Martini, famed for leather bags decorated with geographical map patterns, was also targeted by the Italian inquiries for allegedly sub-contracting work to Chinese-owned firms in Italy that mistreated workers.

The Alviero Martini group was “careful in selecting direct suppliers … but the use of sub-suppliers was not actually checked properly,” Ilaria Ramoni, who served as court administrator overseeing its operations until October, said in an interview.

The group, which is no longer under court administration, did not respond to a request for comment. It stated in September it was unaware of the illegal behavior occurring within its supply chain.

Dior and Armani are still under special judicial oversight as part of the Milan’s investigation into labor exploitation. – Reuters