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Global Fund suspends partnership with Heineken
GFO Issue 334

Global Fund suspends partnership with Heineken

Author:

David Garmaise

Article Type:
News

Article Number: 2

The Fund cites concerns about Heinekenā€™s use of promotional beer girls

ABSTRACT For weeks, the Global Fund has been criticized for entering into a partnership with Heineken because of concerns about the effects of alcohol on health. Now, the Global Fund has suspended the partnership ā€“ but, it says, for reasons that are unrelated to the criticism: The Fund said it was concerned about Heinekenā€™s use of female beer promoters in ways that expose them to sexual exploitation and health risks. Executive Director Peter Sands announced the decision in a message to the Board and in a statement on the Fundā€™s website.

The Global Fund has backed out of its partnership with Heineken ā€“ā€“ but not, apparently, for the reasons you might think.

On 29 March, the Fund said in a brief announcement that it was suspending its partnership with Heineken ā€œbecause of recent reports of the companyā€™s use of female beer promoters in ways that expose them to sexual exploitation and health risks.ā€

On 23 March, Dutch journalist Olivier van Beemen published an article on the website of the newspaper NRC in which he stated that Heineken uses ā€œpromotional girlsā€ to sell beer in 10 African countries, and that the women often face ā€œunwelcome intimacies, abuse or prostitution during their work.ā€

ā€œAlthough we donā€™t know all the details,ā€ Global Fund Executive Director Peter Sands said in a message to the Board, ā€œit is evident that the practice of employing ā€˜beer girlsā€™ is common across the industry. In the context of 2018 this is just not acceptable ā€“ā€“ and really never should have been.ā€

As a result, Sands said, ā€œI have decided that we should suspend the Global Fundā€™s partnership with Heineken until they demonstrate that they are prepared to act decisively to tackle these issues. Doing this now enables us to be on the front foot in response to the inevitable questions about what we are doing about the claims. It could also potentially spur Heineken to lead the industry in making positive changes ā€“ which would be a good thing in itself and could enable us to renew the partnership.ā€

Heineken
Illustration by Roland Blokhuizen, IOGT
International

Van Beemen, who has just published a book about Heinekenā€™s use of beer girls, said that Heineken has known about the problem for many years, but has done little about it. In 2007, he said, a large internal study showed that Heineken was deploying some 15,000 promotional women in over a hundred countries. In 70 markets, the use of these women as beer girls was characterized as risky because of sexual abuse, underpayment, mandatory drinking or provocative uniforms.

Asked to comment on the story, Heineken told van Beemen that ā€œthe described practices completely contradict what we stand for as a company and we strongly condemn these abuses.ā€ Heineken said that ā€œthis topic deserves more attention in Africa than it has received from us and other stakeholders in recent years. We will therefore, together with our local operating companies, promotional agencies and other relevant parties, take further steps to tackle these abuses and prevent them in the future.ā€

The Global Fund and Heineken announced a partnership to fight infectious diseases in January 2018. The Global Fund has come under criticism from a number of public health advocates and other observers for aligning with a product that they said can be detrimental to peopleā€™s health. (See here and here.)

Reactions

It canā€™t have come as a big surprise to officials at the Global Fund that advocates and observers were quick to conclude that the Fund was looking for a pretext to end the partnership.

ā€œThis announcement is good news for global health and development. It is obvious that the Global Fund needs a way out of this ill-advised partnership and latest news provided a face-saving opportunity,ā€ said Kristina Sperkova, International President of IOGT International in a blog on the IOGT website. (IOGT was one of the three NGOs that sent an open letter to the Global Fund earlier this year protesting the partnership.)

But ā€œsuspension is not termination,ā€ Sperkova added. ā€œThe whole drama also exposes the failure of the Global Fund to conduct a thorough analysis before entering into a partnership with an alcohol industry giant.ā€

ā€œThe Global Fundā€™s inability to understand the fundamental conflict of interest between its core mission and partnering with the alcohol industry,ā€ Sperkova said, ā€œmust raise serious doubts about the Global Fundā€™s commitment to pursue evidence-based action to end HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria.ā€

Many people weighed in using the Twittersphere. For example:

Helen Clark is a former Prime Minister of New Zealand and, more recently, former Administrator of UNDP.

The NCD Alliance was another of the NGOs that sent the open letter.

Katie Dain is CEO of the NCD Alliance.

 

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