HomeWhat's newSearchAbout usFrequently Asked QuestionsLinksContact
 
Urgent AppealsCampaignsNewsCompaniesPublicationsCodes of Conduct

Index

NEWSLETTER 22, Oct 2006

Inside a National CCC: Belgium South

The Clean Clothes Campaign is an international campaign, consisting of a loose, informal international partner network of NGOs, unions, individuals and institutions in most countries where garments are produced, organizations in "consumer" countries where these garments are sold, CCC "project groups" in several garment-producing countries (Eastern Europe, India), an international secretariat (based in Amsterdam) and Clean Clothes Campaigns (CCCs) in nine European countries. These CCCs are autonomous coalitions consisting of NGOs (consumer, research, women's, fair trade and youth organisations, solidarity groups, churches, etc.) and trade unions, each with a coordinator and a secretariat. CCC coalitions can be found in Austria, Belgium (North and South), France, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.

Although the European CCCs share a common aim and cooperate on joint projects, they each have their own flavour - due to their composition, history, cultural context and style. We'd like to share with you the workings of the different campaigns. Third in this series is the French- and German-speaking CCC in Belgium: Vêtements Propres.

Vêtements Propres, or VP for short, is an informal platform of 46 organisations in southern Belgium, where French and German are the main languages. Meeting around eight times a year, it serves as a think-tank, debating policy, exchanging ideas for action, and setting the parameters for "clean clothes" campaigning in the region.

VP also has a formal association to service the platform. This is administered by a board drawn from platform members, which meets at least three times a year, and a general secretary who is also the VP coordinator. They are responsible to a general assembly of member organisations meeting once a year. The association does research and analysis, coordinates actions by the members, and undertakes activities. The coordinator also represents the campaign at a national and international level.

When an organisation wishes to join the campaign, this is discussed by the platform. In fact, VP is in a deliberate process of decreasing the number of member organisations so as to strengthen ownership of the campaign by those groups which are actually active. It is also aiming to diversify its activities. There are two working groups within the platform: one on trade unions and one on companies - the second together with the Belgium North CCC.

The Belgian Context

VP is not the only CCC campaign in Belgium. The Flemish-speaking part of the country is covered by the Schone Kleren Campagne, otherwise known as the Belgium North CCC. Each was born from an autonomous process, and this is the normal way of doing things in Belgium, where there are two main communities. The two structures are quite different, as is their way of campaigning. In recent years collaboration has much increased, bringing together very complementary abilities. The national working group on companies, for example, is entering into a very constructive phase.

The German-speaking part of the campaign also has formed a separate informal platform of five organisations (Frauenliga, Landfrauenverband, Miteinander Teilen, Weltladen, Verbraucher-schulzzentrale). This has recently been successful in gaining good media coverage (for example on the Spectrum case).

VP is somewhat unusual in Belgium by being a permanent "single-issue" campaign. Also, it is one of the few to make direct demands on companies; public campaigning in the country is usually aimed at government to introduce legislative change.

How VP Developed

In the mid-1990s, particularly after the "Made in Dignity" campaign carried out by fair trade groups such as Oxfam Magasins du Monde (World Shops), Belgian NGOs saw a need to work more on issues of employment in the developing world. They also wanted to collaborate more with trade unions and others. At the same time, the CCC was trying to expand its campaigning across Europe. An informal consultation was held, and the campaign in Belgium South kicked off in 1996 - exactly ten years ago.

They started with a postcard campaign, demanding answers from garment retailers and brands in Belgium about codes of conduct and implementation. Then campaigning took place around the 1998 soccer World Cup and later EURO 2000. From then on, VP started to work systematically on sportswear, taking the opportunity of important international sport events. Also in 1998, VP hosted the Permanent People's Tribunal on "clean clothes", the first ever international forum of the CCC.

In 2001, the campaign to get the lingerie multinational Triumph to leave Burma was taken up, in collaboration with the Belgium North CCC. In one action, 1.2 km of bras were strung up in the Triumph office garden, an action that received a lot of media attention.

At the end of 2002, VP joined international partners in pushing for better conditions in the global toy industry. In Belgium, this presented an opportunity to build closer links with family and consumer organisations, introducing questions about (over)consumption and proposing alternatives for consumer behaviour.

By 2004, VP took part in the "Play Fair at the Olympics" campaign, geared towards the Athens Games. This proved to be a strong campaign, with more than 90,000 signatures gathered and an international Olympic forum held. In 2006, VP followed this up with an action in Brussels, in cooperation with the Belgium North CCC and Brussels City Council, around the Turin Winter Olympic Games. Brussels city authorities used the occasion to announce that they will now include social standards in their procurement of work wear.

Also in 2004, VP started working more on CCC urgent appeals cases. By 2005, support for the Spectrum workers in Bangladesh entailed VP developing much deeper cooperation with trade unions, particularly with delegates from the Carrefour retail chain, which Spectrum supplied, who went to Bangladesh to investigate.

VP has also tried to influence the implementation of the new European law on public procurement which came into effect in 2004. In October 2006, local elections in Belgium will give VP the opportunity to approach candidates on this issue. It aims to work closely with a few communities, supporting them with tools such as a technical guide, so they can buy more responsibly. Also, VP will be working on a pilot project on work wear companies together with the Fair Wear Foundation.

VP is now working to secure a more stable financial basis and to motivate organisations to be more active. Another of VP's goals is to become more attractive to young people. Last, but certainly not least, VP is in favour of opening up the campaign to similar industrial sectors, as it has done with toys.

Vêtements Propres
Place de l'Université, 16
1348 Louvain-la-Neuve
Belgique
T: +32 (0)10 45 75 27
E: info@vetementspropres.be
W: www.vetementspropres.be

Go to the top of the pageTell a friend about this siteJoin the Urgent Action Network
Inside a National CCC:

How do national CCCs work? Dive into the ins and outs of your country's CCC here - a new country is added each couple of months.

* Austria
* Sweden