Moms deserve better than diamonds from Rio Tinto

With global sales of US $6 billion annually, Signet’s Kay, Jared and Zales jewellery shops are found across the US, Peoples and Mappins stores are throughout Canada, and H. Samuel and Ernest Jones shops are visible on UK high streets.

The unions ILWU, Unifor and USW are organizing demonstrations in the lead up to Mother’s Day at Signet stores in the U.S. and Canada, which is celebrated there on 10 May. This follows recent demonstrations at Signet stores in the UK by unions and civil society organizations from a dozen countries.

The coalition is calling on Signet to abide by its own Responsible Sourcing Policy. This policy declares the company “committed to the responsible sourcing of our products and the respect of human rights, and we expect the same from our suppliers around the world.” 

But Rio Tinto is a notorious violator of labour rights, communities and the environment. As has recently been documented in the report Rio Tinto: The way it really works:

Although the Responsible Jewellery Council (RJC) has certified Rio Tinto, unfortunately the RJC is highly flawed.  It is neither independent – it is governed by industry, excluding labour, civil society and impacted communities. Nor is it transparent – it is impossible for the public to determine whether an RJC-certified company complies with RJC’s own certification requirements, let alone international human rights and environmental standards.

IndustriALL Global Union general secretary Jyrki Raina states: “We’ve raised on multiple occasions concerns with Signet about its supplier Rio Tinto’s practices that are bad for workers, communities and the environment. So far Signet has remained mostly silent while Rio Tinto has responded with threats. We’ll continue to raise our concerns until Rio Tinto changes its practices and behaves like the responsible company it claims to be.”