CorpWatch has a list of the 14 most evil corporations. Their crimes make a very long and varied list. Also worth a read is the 10 Worst Corporations list, although they haven't posted an updated for 2005. Some people have asked why company X or Y isn't on the list; don't think of this as a comprehensive list, this is just CorpWatch's ideas of the worst of them. The 14 corporates, in alphabetical order are:
- Caterpillar
- Chevron
- Coca-Cola
- Dow Chemical
- DynCorp
- Ford Motor Company
- KBR (Kellogg, Brown and Root): A Subsidiary of Halliburton Corporation
- Lockheed Martin
- Monsanto
- Nestle USA
- Philip Morris USA and Philip Morris International (a.k.a. The Altria Group Inc.)
- Pfizer
- Suez-Lyonnaise Des Eaux (SLDE) (also know as Ondeo, SITA, Aguas de Illimani)
- Wal-Mart
Below I have included the full article.
The 14 Worst Corporate Evildoers
Global Exchange
December 12th, 2005
Corporations carry out some of the most horrific human
rights abuses of modern times, but it is increasingly difficult to hold
them to account. Economic globalization and the rise of transnational
corporate power have created a favorable climate for corporate human
rights abusers, which are governed principally by the codes of supply
and demand and show genuine loyalty only to their stockholders.
Several
of the companies below are being sued under the Alien Tort Claims Act,
a law that allows citizens of any nationality to sue in US federal
courts for violations of international rights or treaties. When
corporations act like criminals, we have the right and the power to
stop them, holding leaders and multinational corporations alike to the
accords they have signed. Around the world--in Venezuela, Argentina,
India, and right here in the United States--citizens are stepping up to
create democracy and hold corporations accountable to international law.
Caterpillar
For
years, the Caterpillar Company has provided Israel with the bulldozers
used to destroy Palestinian homes. Despite worldwide condemnation,
Caterpillar has refused to end its corporate participation house
demolition by cutting off sales of specially modified D9 and D10
bulldozers to the Israeli military.
In a letter to Caterpillar
CEO James Owens, The Office of the UN High Commissioner on Human Rights
said: "allowing the delivery of your ... bulldozers to the Israeli army
... in the certain knowledge that they are being used for such action,
might involve complicity or acceptance on the part of your company to
actual and potential violations of human rights..."
Peace
activist Rachel Corrie was killed by a Caterpillar D-9, military
bulldozer in 2003. She was run over while attempting to block the
destruction a family's home in Gaza. Her family filed suit against
Caterpillar in March 2005 charging that Caterpillar knowingly sold
machines used to violate human rights. Since Corrie's death at least
three more Palestinians have been killed in their homes by Israeli
bulldozer demolitions.
Chevron
The
petrochemical company Chevron is guilty of some of the worst
environmental and human rights abuses in the world. From 1964 to 1992,
Texaco (which transferred operations to Chevron after being bought out
in 2001) unleashed a toxic "Rainforest Chernobyl" in Ecuador by leaving
over 600 unlined oil pits in pristine northern Amazon rainforest and
dumping 18 billion gallons of toxic production water into rivers used
for bathing water. Llocal communities have suffered severe health
effects, including cancer, skin lesions, birth defects, and spontaneous
abortions.
Chevron is also responsible for the violent
repression of peaceful opposition to oil extraction. In Nigeria,
Chevron has hired private military personnel to open fire on peaceful
protestors who oppose oil extraction in the Niger Delta.
Additionally
Chevron is responsible for widespread health problems in Richmond,
California, where one of Chevron's largest refineries is located.
Processing 350,000 barrels of oil a day, the Richmond refinery produces
oil flares and toxic waste in the Richmond area. As a result, local
residents suffer from high rates of lupus, skin rashes, rheumatic
fever, liver problems, kidney problems, tumors, cancer, asthma, and eye
problems.
The Unocal Corporation, which recently became a
subsidiary of Chevron, is an oil and gas company based in California
with operations around the world. In December 2004, the company settled
a lawsuit filed by 15 Burmese villagers, in which the villagers alleged
Unocal's complicity in a range of human rights violations in Burma,
including rape, summary execution, torture, forced labor and forced
migration.
Coca-Cola
Coca-Cola Company
is perhaps the most widely recognized corporate symbol on the planet.
The company also leads in the abuse of workers' rights, assassinations,
water privatization, and worker discrimination. Between 1989 and 2002,
eight union leaders from Coca-Cola bottling plants in Colombia were
killed after protesting the company's labor practices. Hundreds of
other Coca-Cola workers who have joined or considered joining the
Colombian union SINALTRAINAL have been kidnapped, tortured, and
detained by paramilitaries who are hired to intimidate workers to
prevent them from unionizing.
In India, Coca-Cola destroys local
agriculture by privatizing the country's water resources. In
Plachimada, Kerala, Coca-Cola extracted 1.5 million liters of deep well
water, which they bottled and sold under the names Dasani and BonAqua.
The groundwater was severely depleted, affecting thousands of
communities with water shortages and destroying agricultural activity.
As a result, the remaining water became contaminated with high chloride
and bacteria levels, leading to scabs, eye problems, and stomach aches
in the local population.
Coca-Cola is also one of the most
discriminatory employers in the world. In the year 2000, 2,000
African-American employees in the U.S. sued the company for race-based
disparities in pay and promotions.
Dow Chemical
Dow
Chemical has been destroying lives and poisoning the planet for
decades. The company is best known for the ravages and health disaster
for millions of Vietnamese and U.S. Veterans caused by its lethal
Vietnam War defoliant, Agent Orange. Dow also developed and perfected
Napalm, a brutal chemical weapon that burned many innocents to death in
Vietnam and other wars. In 1988, Dow provided pesticides to Saddam
Hussein despite warnings that they could be used to produce chemical
weapons.
In 2001, Dow inherited the toxic legacy of the worst
peacetime chemical disaster in history when it acquired Union Carbide
Corporation (UCC) and its outstanding liabilities in Bhopal, India. On
Dec. 3, 1984, a chemical leak from a UCC pesticide plant in Bhopal
gassed thousands of people to death and left more than 150,000 disabled
or dying. Dow still refuses to address its liabilities in Bhopal.
Dow
Chemical's impact is felt globally from its Midland, Michigan
headquarters to New Plymouth, New Zealand. In Midland, Dow has been
producing chlorinated chemicals and burning and burying its waste
including chemicals that make up Agent Orange. In New Plymouth, 500,000
gallons of Agent Orange were produced and thousands of tons of
dioxin-laced waste was dumped in agricultural fields.
DynCorp
Private
security contractors have become the fastest-growing sector of the
global economy during the last decade--a $100-billion-a-year, nearly
unregulated industry. DynCorp, one of the providers of these mercenary
services, demonstrates the industry's power and potential to abuse
human rights. While guarding Afghan statesmen and African oil fields,
training Iraqi police forces, eradicating Colombian coca plants, and
protecting business interests in hurricane-devastated New Orleans,
these hired guns bolster the security of governments and organizations
at the expense of many people's human rights.
DynCorp's
fumigation of coca crops along the Colombian-Ecuadorian border led
Ecuadorian peasants to sue DynCorp in 2001. Plaintiffs argued that
DynCorp knew--or should have known--that the herbicides were highly
toxic.
In 2001, a mechanic with DynCorp blew the whistle on
DynCorp employees in Bosnia for rape and trading girls as young as 12
into sex slavery. According to a lawsuit filed by the mechanic,
"employees and supervisors were engaging in perverse, illegal and
inhumane behavior [and] were purchasing illegal weapons, women, [and]
forged passports." DynCorp fired the whistleblower and transferred the
employees accused of sex trading out of the country, eventually firing
some. None were prosecuted.
Ford Motor Company
Among
automakers, Ford Motor Company is the worst. Every year since 1999, the
US Environmental Protection Agency has ranked Ford cars, trucks and
SUVs as having the worst overall fuel economy of any American
automaker. Ford's current car and truck fleet has a lower average fuel
efficiency than the original Ford Model-T.
Ford is also in last
place when it comes to vehicle greenhouse gas emissions. According to a
recent report by the Union of Concerned Scientists, Ford has "the
absolute worst heat-trapping gas emissions performance of all the Big
Six automakers."
Despite the company's recent greenwashing PR
campaign, its record has actually worsened. According to Ford's own
sustainability report, between 2003 and 2004, the company's US
fleet-wide fuel economy decreased and its CO2 emissions went up. Ford
has also lobbied against lawmakers' efforts to increase fuel economy
standards at the national level and is also involved in a lawsuit
against California's fuel economy standards.
KBR (Kellogg, Brown and Root): A Subsidiary of Halliburton Corporation
KBR
is a private company that provides military support services. Notorious
for its questionable bookkeeping, dishonest billing practices with US
taxpayer dollars and no-bid contracts, KBR has violated human rights on
the U.S. dollar.
KBR's dubious accounting in Iraq came to light
in December 2003 when Pentagon auditors questioned possible overcharges
for imported gasoline. In June 2005, a previously secret Pentagon audit
criticized $1.4 billion in "questioned" and "unsupported" expenditures.
In 2002 the company paid $2 million to settle a Justice Department
lawsuit that accused KBR of inflating contract prices at Fort Ord,
California.
Many third-country national (TCN) laborers have been
hired by KBR to "rebuild" Iraq. Generally hailing from impoverished
Asian countries, they have unexpectedly become part of the largest
civilian workforce ever hired in support of a U.S. war. Once abroad,
the workers find themselves with few protections and uncertain legal
status. TCNs often sleep in crowded trailers and wait outside in
scorching heat for food rations. Many lack adequate medical care and
put in hard labor seven days a week, 10 hours or more a day.
Lockheed Martin
Lockheed
Martin is the world's largest military contractor. Providing
satellites, planes, missiles and other lethal high-tech items to the
Pentagon keeps the profits rolling in. Since 2000, the year Bush was
elected, the company's stock value has tripled.
As the Center
for Corporate Policy (www.corporatepolicy.org) notes, it is no
coincidence that Lockheed VP Bruce Jackson--who helped draft the
Republican foreign policy platform in 2000--is a key player at the
Project for a New American Century, the intellectual incubator of the
Iraq war.
Lockheed Martin is not the only defense contractor
that goes behind the scenes to influence public policy, but it is one
of the worst. Stephen J. Hadley, who now has Condoleeza Rice's old job
as Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, was
formerly a partner in a DC law firm representing Lockheed Martin. He is
only one of the beneficiaries of the so-called revolving door between
the military industries and the "civilian" national security apparatus.
These war profiteers have a profound and illegitimate influence on our
country's international policy decisions.
Monsanto
Monsanto
is, by far, the largest producer of genetically engineered seeds in the
world, dominating 70% to 100% of the market for crops such as soy,
cotton, wheat and corn.
Monsanto is the world's leading producer
of the herbicide glyphosate, marketed as Roundup. Roundup is sold to
small farmers as a pesticide, yet harms crops in the long run as the
toxins accumulate in the soil. Plants eventually become infertile,
forcing farmers to purchase genetically modified Roundup Ready Seed, a
seed that resists the herbicide. This creates a cycle of dependency on
Monsanto for both the weed killer and the only seed that can resist it.
Both products are patented, and sold at inflated prices. Exposure to
the pesticide is documented to cause cancers, skin disorders,
spontaneous abortions, premature births, and damage to the
gastrointestinal and nervous systems.
According to the India
Committee of the Netherlands and the International Labor Rights Fund,
Monsanto also employs child labor. In India, an estimated 12,375
children work in cottonseed production for farmers paid by Indian and
multinational seed companies, including Monsanto.
Nestle USA
The
problem of illegal and forced child labor is rampant in the chocolate
industry, because more than 40% of the world's cocoa supply comes from
the Ivory Coast, a country that the US State Department estimates had
approximately 109,000 child laborers working in hazardous conditions on
cocoa farms. In 2001, Save the Children Canada reported that 15,000
children between 9 and 12 years old, many from impoverished Mali, had
been tricked or sold into slavery on West African cocoa farms, many for
just $30 each.
Nestle, the third largest buyer of cocoa from the
Ivory Coast, is well aware of the tragically unjust labor practices
taking place on the farms with which it continues to do business.
Nestle and other chocolate manufacturers agreed to end the use of
abusive and forced child labor on cocoa farms by July 1, 2005, but they
failed to do so.
Nestle is also notorious for its aggressive
marketing of infant formula in poor countries in the 1980s. Because of
this practice, Nestle is still one of the most boycotted corporations
in the world, and its infant formula is still controversial. In Italy
in 2005, police seized more than two million liters of Nestle infant
formula that was contaminated with the chemical isopropylthioxanthone
(ITX).
Additionally, violations of labor rights are reported
from Nestle factories in numerous countries. In Colombia, Nestle
replaced the entire factory staff with lower-wage workers and did not
renew the collective employment contract.
Philip Morris USA and Philip Morris International (a.k.a. The Altria Group Inc.)
Among
tobacco companies, Philip Morris is notorious. Now called Altria, it is
the world's largest and most profitable cigarette corporation and maker
of Marlboro, Virginia Slims, Parliament, Basic and many other brands of
cigarettes.
Documents uncovered in a lawsuit filed against the
tobacco industry by the state of Minnesota showed that Philip Morris
and other leading tobacco corporations knew very well of the dangers of
tobacco products and the addictiveness of nicotine. To this day, Philip
Morris deceives consumers about the harm of its products by offering
light, mild and low-tar cigarettes that give consumers the illusion
these brands are "healthier" than traditional cigarettes.
Although
the company says it doesn't want kids to smoke, it spends millions of
dollars every day marketing and promoting cigarettes to youth.
Overseas, it has even hired underage "Marlboro girls" to distribute
free cigarettes to other children and sponsored concerts where
cigarettes were handed out to minors.
As anti-tobacco campaigns
and government regulations are slowing tobacco use in Western
countries, Philip Morris has aggressively moved into developing country
markets, where smoking and smoking-related deaths are on the rise.
Preliminary numbers released by the World Health Organization predict
global deaths due to smoking-related illnesses will nearly double by
2020, with more than three-quarters of those deaths in the developing
world.
Pfizer
Pfizer is the largest
pharmaceutical company in the world; it is also one of the worst
abusers of the human right of universal access to HIV/AIDS medicine.
In
addition to Viagra, Zoloft, Zithromax and Norvasc, Pfizer produces the
drug fluconazole (an antifungal used by AIDS patients) under the name
Diflucan, and sells it at inflated prices most poor people cannot
afford. The company refuses to grant generic licenses of fluconazole to
governments in countries like Brazil, South Africa, or Dominican
Republic, where patients are forced to pay $20 per weekly pill, though
the average national wage is only $120 per month.
Pfizer also
values shareholder profits over safety standards. In Europe in 2005, it
withdrew from scientific studies of a new class of AIDS drugs called
CCR5 inhibitors, choosing instead to rush its own untested CCR5
inhibitor onto the European market without full information about the
drug's side effects.
Suez-Lyonnaise Des Eaux (SLDE)
The
privatization of water has had a disastrous impact on the human right
to clean water, and the French company Suez is the worst perpetrator of
this abuse. The company's billions of dollars in profit come at the
expense of poor people living in countries where thousands lack access
to potable water, and, because of private water contracts, are also
facing skyrocketing water prices.
Suez goes by many names around
the world--Ondeo, SITA and others--to mask its worldwide net of
controversial activities. In Manila, Philippines, after seven years of
water privatization under a Suez company (Maynilad Water) contract,
studies showed that water rates increased in some neighborhoods by 400
to 700 percent. These studies also showed that the negligence of the
company resulted in cholera and gastroenteritis outbreaks that killed
six people and severely sickened 725 in Manila's Tondo district.
In
Bolivia, a Suez company (Aguas de Illimani) left 200,000 people without
access to water and caused a revolt when it tried to charge between
$335 and $445 to connect a private home to the water supply. Countless
people were unable to afford this charge in a country whose yearly per
capita GDP is $915.
Unfortunately, the IMF and World Bank are
playing a key role in pushing water privatization all over the world.
Many countries have been required to open up their water supply to
private companies as a condition for receiving IMF loans, and the World
Bank has approved millions of dollars in loans for the privatization of
water systems.
Wal-Mart
Wal-Mart is the
biggest corporation in the world. It owns 5,100 stores worldwide and
employs 1.3 million workers in the United States and 400,000 abroad, as
well as millions more in the factories of its suppliers.
Many
people have heard of the way that Wal-Mart steamrolls its way into
every possible town, destroying local supermarkets and countless small
businesses. We have also heard about Wal-Mart's long track record of
worker abuse, from forced overtime to sex discrimination to illegal
child labor to relentless union busting. Wal-Mart also notoriously
fails to provide health insurance to over half of its employees, who
are then left to rely on themselves or taxpayers, who provide for a
portion of their healthcare needs through government Medicaid.
Less
well known is the fact that Wal-Mart maintains its low price level by
allowing substandard labor conditions at the overseas factories
producing most of its goods. The company continually demands lower
prices from its suppliers, who, in turn, make more outrageous and
abusive demands on their workers in order to meet Wal-Mart's
requirements.
In September 2005, the International Labor Rights
Fund filed a lawsuit on behalf of Wal-Mart supplier sweatshop workers
in China, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Nicaragua and Swaziland. The workers
were denied minimum wages, forced to work overtime without
compensation, and were denied legally mandated health care. Other
worker rights violations that have been found in foreign factories that
produce goods for Wal-Mart include locked bathrooms, starvation wages,
pregnancy tests, denial of access to health care, and workers being
fired and blacklisted if they try to defend their rights.
UPDATED: Fixed formatting and expanded discussion at the top. Also check out the comments from an ex-Pfizer employee, hectic.


Dominic has posted about an article about the 14 worst (most evil) corporations in the world. Its really interesting and rather horrific what these corporations do! You should all go and read his post!In addition, a while back Jonathan also wrote an inter
Tracked: Dec 13, 10:13