Ego warriors: U2 speak out on rock-star hypocrisy

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Interesting article from The Guardian

Ego warriors: U2 speak out on rock-star hypocrisy

Over the years, U2 have taken many a kicking. But the band believe they're unjustly maligned for their unique brand of 'stadium activism'


Dorian Lynskey guardian.co.uk, Thursday 30 July 2009 21.30 BST

Tuesday night in Amsterdam. Inside the city's ArenA, the colour green floods a giant mosaic of video screens, below which stand the four members of U2, three weeks into their 360 tour. As the band strike up Sunday Bloody Sunday, the screens flash images of protesters on the streets of Tehran alongside lines in Farsi by the Persian poet Rumi. Thus, a song written 26 years ago about political violence in Northern Ireland finds a new and pressing context.

The sequence vividly illustrates U2's unique brand of stadium activism. There's also a tribute to the incarcerated Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi during Walk On, and a recorded message from Desmond Tutu for the One campaign, co-founded by Bono to mobilise support for developing country debt relief and HIV/Aids treatment, among other issues. No globally successful rock band has ever foregrounded politics for so many years, let alone stalked the corridors of power to help thrash out deals, which is why representatives from Amnesty and the World Food Programme cross paths with Helena Christensen and Anton Corbijn in the VIP area.

Equally, the sequence demonstrates the limits of U2's approach. The band have always worked on the principle that in the awareness-raising business something, however imperfect, is better than nothing, but Iran-watchers might justifiably argue that an emotive one-minute montage simplifies, even trivialises, a complicated situation. It really depends on how much imperfection you're willing to accept.

For U2's most dogged critics, the answer is: not much. Around the time of Live 8, the travel writer Paul Theroux branded Bono one of the "mythomaniacs – people who wish to convince the world of their worth". After U2 moved part of their business to the Netherlands to reduce their tax burden in 2006, the Daily Mail dubbed the singer "St Bono the Hypocrite". The Irish writer Eamonn McCann recently labelled U2's music "a toxic cloud of fluffy rhetoric, a soundtrack for the terminally self-satisfied".

The subject of such opprobrium sits in his Amsterdam hotel suite, breakfasting on black coffee and cornflakes, and ponders the downside of being the world's most famous rock star activist. "A little information can do a lot of harm," he says, his voice hoarse from the previous night. "A lot of people don't know what I do so they think, 'He's just turning up in photographs with starving Africans or some president or prime minister. We don't like that. Rock stars telling elected officials what to do, and then they run back to their villas in the south of France. Fuck 'em.'" But, he insists, "if you look into it you think, 'This guy works two-and-a-half days a week at this, not being paid for it, and at cost to his band and his family, and doesn't mind taking a kicking.'"

With his hair cropped short, and his body bunched and compact like a fist, Bono resembles a retired boxer, jabbing the air to make his points. When I meet the rest of U2 individually, their body language also speaks volumes. Guitarist the Edge is serenely quiet and still, except when his eyes crinkle slightly in concentration or mirth. Bassist Adam Clayton sprawls louchely on a sofa, with a perpetual air of mild and mysterious amusement. Drummer Larry Mullen Jr leans forward intently, punctuating his responses with an apologetic grimace as if, far from being the man who founded U2, he had simply won a competition to be the drummer in a rock band. "Nothing with U2 really makes sense," he says, eyes widening. "I have no idea how we managed to get to this place."

The history of rock stars who take on politics is somewhat chequered. Bob Dylan repudiated it, John Lennon tied himself in knots over it, and the Clash were crushed by sky-high expectations. U2's activism has somehow endured and flourished. Their political outlook was shaped by being young and Irish in the late 1970s. As a result of temperament as much as circumstance, U2 could neither play with Clash-style guerrilla chic nor take sides.

"People in the south were always revolted by the acts of terrorism and brutality in the north," says Clayton. "But to express it would have been to sympathise with the Brits, so it was complicated. We were part of finding a spiritual dimension to it rather than just standing at the barricades."

In the early 1980s, U2 were racked by sincerity, applying to such baleful issues as the Troubles, apartheid and the threat of nuclear war a spiritual perspective influenced by soul music and Bob Marley. "You can certainly hear that in the recordings," says the Edge. "Some of it's overwrought and way too intense. There was almost a desperation in the performances to make a connection, which didn't help at times. Our lives seemed to depend on it. There was a sense that it could go all the way or it could go nowhere."

Of course, it went all the way, and U2 clung to the principle of accentuating the positive: Pride (In the Name of Love) mutated from an attack on Ronald Reagan into a celebration of Martin Luther King. Nonetheless, they acquired a grimly humourless image: "These are really serious guys from war-torn Ireland and they've got a thing or two to tell you," as Clayton drily puts it. Their 1992 Zoo TV tour introduced a life-saving element of ironic distance, with its crank calls, costumes and media overload. "By that point, we'd figured out that it's sometimes enough to ask the right question," says the Edge. "You don't necessarily have to come up with an answer."

In the last decade, things have got more complicated. U2's formidable manager, Paul McGuinness, used to tell Bono that an artist's job was to describe problems, not to fix them, but since Bono was first approached to join the Jubilee 2000 debt-relief campaign, he has trod the minefield of top-flight hands-on activism. It is an almost oxymoronic role: the rock star diplomat. "Our job is to bring him back to his position as an artist," says the Edge. "Artists don't have to deal in the muddy grey of political reality. They can see things in black and white terms – ideals. There's an aspirational aspect to rock'n'roll, whereas politics is just one compromise after another."

Bono had the additional misfortune of having to twist arms in Washington during a time when the most divisive president in decades was preparing to launch the most divisive war in decades. As the Iraq fiasco deepened, Bono maintained a diplomatic silence, and images of him beside a grinning George Bush (whom Clayton dismissively refers to as "the other fella") returned to haunt him. He is grateful to the film-maker Michael Moore for kind words at the time. "He said, 'Look, this must be very difficult for you, doing what you're doing while the rest of us are mobilising against this war. I want you to know that you don't have to do everything – you just have to do something.' It was a great feeling."

But even with Bush gone, Bono relies on cross-party support for his campaigns. Two weeks ago, he revealed to Jonathan Ross that he had dodged a hug with Bush during a 2006 photo-op, and rightwing bloggers howled in outrage, causing trouble for his campaigning partners. "It's very hard for me to keep quiet about anything," he says, smiling. "I'm more used to putting my foot in my mouth than I am biting my hand." He says he was known "quietly" as an opponent of the war but refuses to demonise its architects. "There are people who will be walking differently for the rest of their lives because of their decision to invade Iraq," he says. "Remember, 9/11's not far behind. They really are nervous about that. And Blair, too. He doesn't want to be Chamberlain – the guy who says everything's going to be fine. They see this darkness on the horizon and they make a really, spectacularly bad decision. I did say to Condi [Rice], 'Think about what happened in Ireland. The British army arrived to protect the Catholic minority but when you're standing on street corners in hard hats and khaki you very quickly become the enemy.' But I wasn't there for that. I had to keep my focus. You're asking, 'Don't you speak up? Don't you get out on the streets?' I gave up that right once I was in a position of voicing the desire to stay alive of millions of people who had no voice."

Mullen, however, admitted his unease, earlier this year, over Bono consorting with "war criminals", a moment of candour that now makes him wince. "My only regret is that I might have made it easier for his critics to throw some more stones at him, which was really not my intention," he sighs. "There's no question of rolling over in my views; it's just looking at the bigger picture. You can argue it up and down but in the end you have to stand up and go, 'This works.'" Again, it comes down to how much imperfection you're willing to accept. "I've always thought the result was worth whatever way he got there," says Clayton. "I don't think being photographed with George Bush or Tony Blair is too high a price to pay."

Bono may be U2's self-appointed flak-catcher but he worries his activism opens his bandmates to criticism. "They're getting part of the kicking because they have me in the band. So I feel for them. I do." An example: nobody gives a damn about, say, the Red Hot Chili Peppers' accountancy practises, but U2's tax move was roundly slammed as rank hypocrisy.

Bono rubs his temples and sighs. "It's very difficult. The thing I probably regret is not talking about it more but we agreed in the band not to. Which is annoying. What bothered me was it's like you're hiding your money in some tax haven and people think of the Cayman Islands. And you're campaigning for Africa and transparency – of course that looked like hypocrisy. People whom I've annoyed, people who wished us to fail, they finally got what they thought must have been there in the first place. It was a hook to hang me on." He claps his hands forcefully and points. "'We got him!' You could, if you wanted, get … y'know … it could get you going. You look at it and say, 'Well what have you done?'" His flash of annoyance passes. "People are just trying to do the best they can. You can't do everything."

At moments like this, you realise that even Bono's famously thick skin has its vulnerable spots. Even as U2 are keenly aware of the contradictions of their position ("To open yourself up to the possibility of change doesn't mean you have to live up to some impossible ideal," says the Edge), they can't help but be caught up in them sometimes, for one man's contradiction is another's hypocrisy. So Bono squares his shoulders and tries at least to be candid. When I ask why his songs refuse to name specific targets, he says: "The villain is usually me. The hypocrisy of the human heart is the number one target. Rarely do we point the finger at anyone other than ourselves."

He knows why some people don't like him. "I can be annoying," he says with a grin. "I have a kind of annoying gene." But he seems understandably tired of the allegation that he's just a messianic blowhard. It's a cliche, he thinks, to attribute what he does to mere ego. "As Delmore Schwartz said, 'Ego is always at the wheel.' It's just with rock stars, it's more obvious. The need to be loved and admired doesn't come from a particularly pretty place. But people tend to do a lot of great things with it. Ego, yes, but the ego that's in everything human beings are capable of. Without ego, things would be so dull."

I mention a line from Cedars of Lebanon, the closing track on U2's latest album, No Line on the Horizon: "Choose your enemies carefully 'cos they will define you." "As an insight into our band, it's the most important line," he says. "It explains pretty much everything. U2 chose more interesting targets than other bands. Your own hypocrisies. Your addictions, but not to the obvious. Your ego." He emits a hoarse chuckle. "I think we made our enemies very interesting."
 
Bono, U2 will never be off the hook.

You have spat the hard facts of life into the faces of every citizen of every modern country. We are environmentally conditioned to like "ignorance is bliss". Out of sight, out of mind. Of course, there are starving boys and girls in Africa. Sure, there are infrequent clips of the situation in Africa. Yes, we watch and feel that horrible side of human morality: guilt.

So while the American people make you rich, you pay us back by telling us of the horrors of the realities in third world countries. You say we can and should do something about it. You tell us the real picture of how the rich can help the poor. We know we can...Yeah, we know we can help. We know that small sacrifices can make a major change somewhere else. 1%. A penny for every dollar. Two dimes for a twenty dollar bill. Yeah, we can afford that. We can just sacrifice a few bloated, fat, idle programs in the government for just that much. Yet, we don't, and there comes that monkey on our backs: guilt.

You make us feel guilty. You makes us feel guilty while we make you rich. We pay high ticket prices and you still can't shut up about how we can change the world if we actually did do something about it. You have everything we ever wanted, and you ask for more. You ask us to turn our heads to the destruction, the sick, and the dying. You ask us to feel what we can hide from. Damn you, Bono. We don't have to and its annoying.

You know what else? You're right. If you use your money, you can make a small difference at a high cost. If we all worked together, we can make a HUGE difference for such a small cost. If we all just spoke up a little and made a popular demand to the government...

Yes, but no thanks. That takes a little work. I can just point a finger at you and ask you why you don't do anything about it, even though I know that's incorrect. Hell, everyone else is doing it. I can shrug off responsibility and nothing will ever come of it.

So, yeah, Bono. You are a hypocrite. Richass muthfucka who asks me to spare my money I worked very hard for what I have. I'm not sharing. Too bad, so sad.
 
^I don't even get your post. :confused:

It sounds like you agree with Bono on pretty much everything, but just don't like that you feel guilty? No one can make you feel guilty; we are so because of our own failures. Further, it sounds like you're framing this as a sort of "biting the hand that fed him" situation, but Bono is really not just criticizing America (actually, he praises America's significant action to fight extreme poverty), and making "us" feel guilty. He is speaking to the world, including his own country's government.

Besides, the only people Bono actually would guilt are the politicians themselves. He does not plead with us for donations. He does not ask our charity. He may encourage us to get involved, take action, speak out, etc, but that is mobilisation -- not guilt.

Finally, it sounds like you don't think that Bono should be talking about these issues at all because he's rich? Because, that would make him a hypocrite? What do you suggest then -- leaving it to the poor people themselves? They don't have a voice on the international stage. Bono does. He has the right and the responsibility -- as a human being who lives on this earth, and wants to leave it a better place for his kids -- to speak up.


I am really at a loss here, with this whole argument. What would you want him to do? Would you actually respect him more if he just said "Eh, fuck 'em." It's one thing if you just don't care to get involved, but why do you have to tear down the people who are?
 
The Guardian is constantly bashing U2. Paul Lester just wrote a very negative article which had the word hypocrite in every second sentence. So what? I may not agree with everything Bono or the band does, but I still think it's better using your fame trying to achieve things than just sitting around bitching about those who do. And I'm getting tired of always hearing "Bono". From the last article it seemed like U2 consists ony of one person who's responsible for all the evil.
 
The Guardian is constantly bashing U2. Paul Lester just wrote a very negative article which had the word hypocrite in every second sentence. So what? I may not agree with everything Bono or the band does, but I still think it's better using your fame trying to achieve things than just sitting around bitching about those who do. And I'm getting tired of always hearing "Bono". From the last article it seemed like U2 consists ony of one person who's responsible for all the evil.

i think this is quite a positive U2 article actually...
 
^ Sorry, I didn't mean this recent one, I think it's quite good. But there was an article in the Guardian a couple of days ago, written by Paul Lester, who's been very critical of U2 in the past, and he personally attacked the band and Bono in particular and used the word "hypocrite" a lot. It's interesting that U2 feel the need to talk to the Guardian right now, after that article had come out.
 
At the end of the day, what I care about is U2's music, not its political / social / humanitarian causes. For me, Bono's activism does not equate, in any way, with U2. Of course, it informs his perspective and sometimes the songwriting, but so might the cornflakes he ate for breakfast. It's just one more part of him, but it's certainly not all, and in any case he's only 1/4 of U2.

In a way, then, it's unfortunate for the group that 95% of what it written/spoken about them in the mass media is no longer about their music, but rather about "their" causes and their latest weighted cultural status (either as strong as ever, or like the Titanic after the iceberg, depending on which hack you read). But this is the slippery slope that any artist who takes us real-life, practical causes will eventually encounter -- in U2's case it's magnified times 1000 because of their huge global profile and lasting popularity.

But at the end of the day, it's their music I care about, not Bono's activism. I will say, however, that as far as the lyrics go (which are relevant to the music), I do agree with the criticisms that they are too vague, and are approaching cliche. At this point, if the band want to write songs indicting corruption, greed, or nation-states, they know a lot about who to point the finger at, and I think they should do so. Are they afraid to do so because it would offend some of Bono's political-friends, or frighten the shareholders at LiveNation? Is U2 simply too corporate now to speak the truth, when it's ugly? I would hope not... still, consider the lyrics to "Illegal Attacks" by Ian Brown (w/Sinead O'Connor) two years ago:

"So what the fuck is this UK
Gunnin’ with this US of A
In Iraq and Iran and in Afghanistan

Does not a day go by
Without the Israeli Air Force
Fail to drop it’s bombs from the sky?

It’s a commercial crusade
‘Cause all the oil men get paid
And only so many soldiers come home
It’s a commando crusade
A military charade
And only so many soldiers come home

Through all the blood and sweat
Nobody can forget
It ain’t the size of the dog in the fight
It’s the size of the fight in the dog on the day or the night
There’s no time to reflect
On the threat, the situation, the bark nor the bite
These are commercial crusades
‘Cos all the oil men get paid
These are commando crusades
Commando tactical rape
And from the streets of New York and Baghdad to Tehran and Tel Aviv
Bring forth the prophets of the Lord
From dirty bastards fillin’ pockets
With the profits of greed
These are commercial crusades
Commando tactical raids
Playin’ military charades to get paid

And who got the devils?
And who got the Lords?
Build yourself a mountain – Drink up in the fountain

What mean ya that you beat my people
What mean ya that you beat my people
And grind the faces of the poor?
"

It's not exactly Grade-A poetry, but no one can miss the intent. I do wish some of the big acts of today would write songs that actually have some specific meaning.

Anyway, U2 have always dealt in the spirit more than the practical, which was great. But now that Bono's activism (in the real world, not the spiritual) has become the media focus of the group, there inevitably appears a gap between what they do and what they sing about. This is the "slippery slope" I mentioned earlier.
 
^I don't even get your post. :confused:

Sorry, I didn't mean to seem like I was striking at Bono. It's a post of irony. It is an insight into the reasoning of why people point their fingers at Bono, because it is easier than facing the truth.

I'm not a great writer, so I understand why it confuses you. I love Bono and U2 and this was post was intended to defend that band, except it was written in verse of a self-pitying coward...thus the irony.
 
I think Bono has made it pretty clear why he separates his activism from his music. I love him as a lyricist because his lyrics are poetic. When he's speaking for his political causes, he's clear and direct, that's the way it should be. The thing I love most about U2's lyrics is that they can mean different things to different people. For me, Bono is as much a poet/philosopher/spiritual person than he is a political activist. He lives in both worlds and I don't have a problem with seeing both sides of him.
 
Sorry, I didn't mean to seem like I was striking at Bono. It's a post of irony. It is an insight into the reasoning of why people point their fingers at Bono, because it is easier than facing the truth.

I'm not a great writer, so I understand why it confuses you. I love Bono and U2 and this was post was intended to defend that band, except it was written in verse of a self-pitying coward...thus the irony.

I thought your post was very well written. I did see the irony of it.

Though, I never agreed with the Iraqi War. I could understand why Bono was meeting with former President Bush. I have to admit the photos did make me cringe. Not on Bono's part, but Bush. Bono was there to insure that more money would be made available to those living in a desperate situation. I commend him for this. And as a U.S. taxpaying citizen. I don't mind if some of my money is used for food, clothing, shelter, clean water and medical supplies. I'm happy to help.

Mr. Bush tripled aid to Africa, which was one good thing about his years in office.
 
Thanks for posting, elfa.

I really liked this part:

Mullen, however, admitted his unease, earlier this year, over Bono consorting with "war criminals", a moment of candour that now makes him wince. "My only regret is that I might have made it easier for his critics to throw some more stones at him, which was really not my intention," he sighs. "There's no question of rolling over in my views; it's just looking at the bigger picture. You can argue it up and down but in the end you have to stand up and go, 'This works.'" Again, it comes down to how much imperfection you're willing to accept. "I've always thought the result was worth whatever way he got there," says Clayton. "I don't think being photographed with George Bush or Tony Blair is too high a price to pay."

It shows what I think most fans of the band already assumed - that you can disagree with a small aspect of someone's activities in a civil way, while still agreeing with and respecting all the rest of it. They obviously do see the bigger picture. Props to Larry and Adam.
 
I welcome the fact that Larry is not retracting his statement - which personally I completely agree with.
 
I was reading this interview earlier (it seems more a summing up of known facts than an interview, but anyway...) and I rather liked it. I think general public dislike for U2 has quite inappropriately increased of late for no discernible reason other than they make a rather obvious target. The 'what hypocrites for having such an energy-wasting tour' argument is getting a bit thin on the ground now. What Bono's campaign work for debt relief has to do with green issues, I'll never know...
 
Sorry, I didn't mean to seem like I was striking at Bono. It's a post of irony. It is an insight into the reasoning of why people point their fingers at Bono, because it is easier than facing the truth.

I'm not a great writer, so I understand why it confuses you. I love Bono and U2 and this was post was intended to defend that band, except it was written in verse of a self-pitying coward...thus the irony.

ohhhhh, sorry! I must not have had my irony antennae adjusted correctly. :wink:
 
I welcome the fact that Larry is not retracting his statement - which personally I completely agree with.

Hell, Bono probably agrees with Larry's statement. But again, it's a big picture thing.

I was reading this interview earlier (it seems more a summing up of known facts than an interview, but anyway...) and I rather liked it. I think general public dislike for U2 has quite inappropriately increased of late for no discernible reason other than they make a rather obvious target. The 'what hypocrites for having such an energy-wasting tour' argument is getting a bit thin on the ground now. What Bono's campaign work for debt relief has to do with green issues, I'll never know...

Other than Sellafield, I've never heard of them being involved in any environmental causes, and I'm not sure you can even count Sellafield as being environmental, as we now think of it, it was a unique case.

I dunno, I'd say it has to do with a combination of Bono being overexposed this decade, between his activism activities and the band, and the band being the biggest in the world. There's a need to knock him/them down a peg or two, lest they become too big for their britches. :shrug:
 
I was reading this interview earlier (it seems more a summing up of known facts than an interview, but anyway...) and I rather liked it. I think general public dislike for U2 has quite inappropriately increased of late for no discernible reason other than they make a rather obvious target. The 'what hypocrites for having such an energy-wasting tour' argument is getting a bit thin on the ground now. What Bono's campaign work for debt relief has to do with green issues, I'll never know...

i dunno... i would've thought energy conservation is just part of general social responsibility these days isn't it?

i mean, if you read the article, the band members are well aware of the problem, i.e. carbon footprint surrounding the tour...
 
re. activism/environment... i think it's all inextricably linked really...

interesting article:

African dream turns sour for orphan army - Times Online

Nothing grows here in the shadows. There is only desolation in the tired soil at Paballo Marumo’s cracked and filthy feet. Her shoes, the thin plastic sandals worn by children across the townships of southern Africa, are gone. “Stolen!” she tells me in her language, Sesotho. At eight years old she sits hopelessly at the bottom of the rubbish dump hierarchy.

“Gap! Gap! Gap!” comes the sudden cry from the 12-year-old leader of a destitute army of rag pickers patrolling the vast waste dump before us.

Paballo is the quickest off her feet, darting towards a trailer overflowing with the discarded remnants of Lesotho’s garment industry. In the twilight I can make out her tiny frame as she runs between burning pillars of denim and cotton.

When they reach the trucks, the youngsters plough headlong into the refuse as it pours from heavy loaders. With stern concentration they fight for scraps, sifting through filthy piles of garment industry waste and sweeping it into sacks.

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Thousands of Gap and Levi’s labels, buttons and studs for stonewashed jeans and huge quantities of heavily dyed cotton and denim pile down over their heads, burying them up to their waists.

Gap’s decision to develop the production of jeans and T-shirts in Lesotho had heralded an era of opportunity for one of the world’s poorest nations but a Sunday Times investigation has exposed an unforeseen consequence of that commitment - the dumping of tons of waste, much of it dangerous, at unsecured municipal sites.

Over the past 12 months the child rag pickers have been attracted to garment dumps by the denim and plastic thrown away by a Taiwanese supplier whose clients include both Gap and Levi Strauss.

Such is the ubiquity of denim and cotton waste in Lesotho that garment refuse has replaced charcoal as cooking fuel. Alarmingly, for the two San Francisco-based firms, the waste dumped by their suppliers Nien Hsing and Formosa Textile - both part of the Nien Hsing Fashion Group - includes harmful chemicals, needles and razors.

Each day it is painstakingly picked over by children and mothers with ailing infants strapped to their backs in a community ravaged by HIV. Not only that, but Nien Hsing is leaking chemical effluent into a river from which cooking water is drawn.

Lesotho, largely isolated from the rest of the world as a landlocked kingdom surrounded by South Africa, has relied heavily on its garment industry to stave off economic collapse. Fuelled by demand in the West for cheap clothing, more than 50 Taiwanese-owned factories have grown up, shipping £500m of jeans, T-shirts and other items to British and American stores last year alone. In recent years the firms have prompted a wave of migration to Maseru from drought-hit rural areas. Today they provide about 40,000 textile jobs, 80% of them held by women.

Bono, the U2 singer, visited three years ago to boost Gap’s Product Red range, from which profits are ploughed into a fund set up by the star to combat diseases such as Aids. But despite the good intentions, the expansion of the industry has seen a sharp increase in unsecured waste. In trawls through the Ha Tsotsane and Ha Tikoe dumps in Maseru, The Sunday Times uncovered sacks bearing the names of several potentially harmful chemicals. Among these were sodium hydroxide, better known as caustic soda, which is used in the manufacture of textiles and can cause chemical burns; and calcium hypochlorite, a cleaning and bleaching agent which has been linked to lung problems, particularly in children.

The sacks were identified as belonging to Nien Hsing/ Formosa Textile Ltd, a supplier of both Levi’s and Gap denim.

The children of the dumps begin their day by hauling such sacks to “work” and using them to collect scraps of cloth.

Waste spilling from trucks includes countless pumice stones for stonewashed jeans, Gap zips and paperwork showing Gap orders to suppliers.

At regular intervals the workers dumping the refuse set fire to it. The burning is particularly intense when heavily treated and dyed cotton and denim and polyurethane bags are set alight. Many children living and working around the Ha Tsotsane site are evidently suffering from respiratory problems and weeping eyes. Others speak of skin complaints.

Thabiso Liaho, 11, and her sister Motselisi, 8, described a miserable routine that revolves around waiting for the trucks to arrive.

“Our father is gone. He died of Aids,” Thabiso said. “So we collect denim and plastic bags from the factories to sell to our neighbours. They burn the denim instead of firewood but when we use it there is thick black smoke and a horrible smell.”

Thabiso knows the hazards posed by chemicals but presses on regardless. “We itch all day and some of the sacks used to dispose the chemicals have powder that makes our hands and arms burn,” she added.

“One girl rubbed it in her eyes last month and started screaming. Sometimes we get rashes.

“The hardest thing for me is the burning. We work two dumps and they are always on fire because there is so much waste. At night we cough up black mucus and my sister wheezes in her sleep.”

The Sunday Times also found children of five handling tools such as needles, rusted and broken knives, fabric cutters and razors, all of which came in consignments from Nien Hsing.

Environmental campaigners in Lesotho are dismayed. “The world needs to know that some of the poorest people are being exploited and their environment destroyed for western firms,” said Jon Bumasaka of the Lesotho Environmental Justice Advocacy Centre.

“These firms tell the world they are helping Africa but look around you - look at the children picking through dangerous waste in the dumps. Is this Bono’s African dream for Gap? Or is it a hell for the poor people who have to live next to these factories?”

The dumps are not the only environmental problem facing Gap and Levi’s in Maseru. On the other side of a road leading from the Ha Tsotsane tip to the city centre, the rag pickers’ mothers and aunts emerge from hovels to draw foul-smelling cooking water from the Caledon River.

The river, like many tributaries across the city, is stained deep blue by effluent from the garment industry. But after a long day at the dumps the children bathe in it regardless.

Some of the effluent comes from a factory operated by Nien Hsing and Formosa Textile. The waste spills into water used by people every day. The situation is particularly bad around the factories run by Nien Hsing and Chinese Garment Manufacturers, which supplied Gap until 18 months ago when the retailer severed its ties because of “serious concerns”.

The streams around Nien Hsing’s site are known among local children as “Blue River”.

“The water has been this colour for as long as I can remember,” said Thabiso, in the one-room shack she shares with four younger siblings near the Ha Tikoe dump. Strapped to her back was the youngest, Leno-hang. Their mother is in hospital with Aids, a national disaster in a country with an HIV infection rate of 30%.

Around the Nien Hsing factories, sick women say the nearest “untainted” water is more than a mile away, an impossible distance for them to walk.

According to an environmental charter drawn up by Gap Inc, which has 3,149 stores worldwide and turned over $14.5 billion last year, the factories that supply it must have an environmental management system and an environmental emergency plan, including procedures to notify the authorities of an accidental discharge.

Tseliso Tsoeu, an environmental expert from Lesotho’s council of nongovernmental organisations, said the law was being broken by the foreign garment industry: “Our laws state that no person shall discharge any poisonous, toxic or chemical substance into our waters. So why is the government allowing our people to bathe in bright blue water stained with effluent and dyes? “ The Chinese and Taiwanese have come here and have basically done what they wanted. They make enormous profits from employing black Africans on behalf of respectable western companies who advertise the highest standards of production but in reality don’t really know what is going on here.”

In a statement yesterday, Dan Henkle, Gap’s senior vice-president of global responsibility, said the company had ordered an investigation as soon as it learnt of the allegations. It had placed Nien Hsing “on immediate notice until our investigation is complete and all issues are adequately addressed”, he said.

Gap accounted for 5% of Nien Hsing production. While an inspection in May had found no significant violations, its waste water was now deemed “unacceptable”.

Henkle added: “We will continue to act swiftly, decisively and thoughtfully in doing everything possible to protect the workers at the factories that make our products and the communities in which they live and work.”

Levi Strauss, which also sent an investigator to Lesotho, said it was “disturbed to see the local water is polluted”. A spokesman added, “It is clear the municipal landfill has not been secured”, and promised to protect the community and children.

It is a world away from the aims set out by Bono, whose visit to Lesotho in 2006 is still being talked about in the factories. The workers and their families recall how the U2 singer, sporting dark glasses imprinted with the word Red, walked among them, stroking children’s foreheads and cracking jokes.

At that year’s Davos economic forum in the Swiss Alps, he had persuaded some of the world’s most sought-after brands, including Armani, Apple and American Express, to develop special products under the Red umbrella.

The concept was simple: half the profits from Red-branded goods launched by him would go to the Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria. He was visiting southern Africa to unveil the next high-profile recruit to the cause: Gap Inc.

For Bono and Gap it was the perfect match. In Lesotho, one of the Aids capitals of the world, Gap had the factories and the local know-how to realise the rock star’s vision - an African factory making branded clothing for Product Red to be marketed from Cape Town to Tokyo.

As Bono toured Precious Garments, the firm slated to make clothes for Gap’s Product Red Range, he declared: “This is the face of transformation.” It was hoped that Product Red, in common with other brands made in Maseru, would help to liberate local people from poverty.

However, while Precious Garments continues to supply Gap, Red T-shirts are no longer made there. A spokesman said he was deeply concerned about the allegations and no Red clothing would be produced in Lesotho until they were resolved.

Although the garment industry has proved an undoubted financial lifeline to many, not all workers are well treated.

At the Nien Hsing factory, where Taiwanese managers oversee production of Gap jeans, a 26-year-old woman named Meluwan said she worked up to 200 hours a month for 30p an hour to support a family of seven.

“I am insulted on a daily basis,” she said. “The Taiwanese call me koko, mentally retarded. They also call me kaffir. It makes me so sad. I don’t know why they call me this.”

Other women accused supervisors of insulting them when they were late with orders.

A spokesman for Nien Hsing said the company was acting on the pollution allegations. “The blue water escaping into local rivers is something we are urgently looking at,” he said. “We are looking into claims that children are picking through our refuse. The first we knew about the child rag pickers was when Gap contacted us this week.” He refused to comment on the claims of abuse.

At the Ha Tikoe dump, Thabiso Liaho offered shelter from a bitter whistling wind in a home propped up by cardboard. “We have to get by looking after each other,” she said.

“The smoke from the dump fills our shack. We all have weeping eyes and running noses and itch after we work there looking for things to sell. The garment trucks come day and night. When we fetch water in the morning it is blue.” As I looked out towards the tip, the call went up again and the children ran towards the trucks.

Gap vows

Gap will conduct a thorough environmental assessment in Lesotho in partnership with an independent environmental organisation.

It will work with factory management to improve training and knowledge around waste handling/disposal.

It will convene a supplier summit in Lesotho to update policies, procedures and expectations.

‘While we’re proud of the progress we’ve made to date, we also understand that conditions are not perfect and that there is still a great deal more to be done to improve both environmental and factory working conditions in developing regions like Lesotho’ - Glenn Murphy, chairman and chief executive, Gap Inc
 
Some of the critiques of U2 and Bono on the environmental issue are smallminded - people sometimes mention the Maserati - do they expect that he get the DART into the recording studio of a morning? Most wealthy people living in Dalkey don't, so why should he? I doubt if he even drives the car much, when would he get the time.

The criticisms re the tax issue have some validity, I reckon.
 
thanks A stor, you're welcome!

here's another interesting snippet i just found while reading the paper online...

from a new article in today's Observer:

Are U2 the last great rock'n'roll idealists? | Luke Bainbridge | Comment is free | The Observer

"A U2 gig is hard to surpass. But watching the show in Amsterdam last month, complete with a live link to the International Space Station, video message from Desmond Tutu and dedication to Aung San Suu Kyi, it felt like the most ambitious rock show ever and the last of a dying breed. It takes 120 trucks to transport the 390 ton stage and Carbonfootprint.com calculates the footprint of the tour would be equivalent to flying them to Mars and back. U2 are now planning to ask each American fan for an extra 50 cents , to help offset pollution, but it's clear such stadium tours are unsustainable or will become increasingly unacceptable."

has anyone heard about this??
 
Thanks a lot Mamma, that article was great. I think it's foolish of Bono to look to clothing and electronics manufacturers to benefit the developing world since the main reason they have factories there is due to the lack or absence of labour and enviornmental regulations. It's heartbreaking. They deal in exploitation.

Now that the organizations Bono has set up are successful, I think he should start speaking out against corporate abuses on all levels, in the developing world and in the developed. How he can remain silent about the robbery taking place in the west is beyond me. The pre-naughty Bono would not be keeping his mouth shut. The world is going to shit and he's not saying anything about it aside from his pet cause. Where did the "Fuck the revolution!" man go?

Anyway, I really hope that they are not planning to ask American fans for 50 cents to offset the polution. Fuck, it's not much but can't the band spare it?!?! Why don't they take it from their blackberry account?
 
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