China Olympics, Tibet Torture, Coca-Cola Profits

by Amit Srivastava
India Resource Center
April 28, 2008
http://www.indiaresource.org/campaigns/coke/2008/cokeolympics.html

San Francisco: Responding to a question about Coca-Cola's sponsorship of 
the Olympic Torch Relay at the Coca-Cola shareholders meeting last week, 
Mr. Isdell, CEO of Coca-Cola, defended the sponsorship by referring to 
the Olympic Torch as a symbol of hope and openness.

At about the same time, the Olympic Torch was being run in New Delhi, 
India. On hand were over 15,000 armed security personnel, including 
Indian paramilitary forces and Chinese security, and the public was 
largely banned from attending. On hand to view the ceremonies were a 
very select few, including a group of children outfitted with Coca-Cola 
T-shirts.

Surely Mr. Isdell got it wrong? The Olympic Torch being paraded through 
a hastily shortened route in New Delhi surrounded by some of the 
tightest security the city has ever seen with the public largely kept 
away is hardly symbolic of the hope and openness that the Olympic Torch 
supposedly symbolizes.

Banner in Sydney, Australia
Banner in Sydney, Australia
Ongoing protests around the Olympics Torch Relay to highlight China's 
occupation of Tibet is a refreshing reminder that no amount of "feel 
good" advertising and "brand" associations can whitewash the reality - 
that the Chinese government suppresses human rights in Tibet.

The Olympic Torch Relay, sponsored primarily by three corporations - US 
based Coca-Cola, South Korea based Samsung and China based Lenovo - are 
critical to the Chinese governments attempts to paint a picture of China 
that is open and tolerant - regardless of the pending human rights concerns.

And China is not the first government that has attempted to use the 
Olympic Games to gain credibility from a global audience. In 1936, the 
Olympic Games were held in Nazi Germany, and the Nazis had the same goal 
- to extract credibility from the world community.

For Coca-Cola, however, the Olympic Games and the Torch Relay provide a 
tremendous marketing opportunity, associating its brand with the feel 
good games that has arguably the largest audience in the world. 
Coca-Cola has reportedly invested more that US$100 million into the 
Games. The promise of financial returns from the sponsorship are too 
great for any human rights or environmental concerns to put a damper on 
their plans.

Actual Coca-Cola Advertisement
Actual Coca-Cola Advertisement with Monks
While China hopes to benefit politically by hosting the Olympic Games, 
Coca-Cola aspires to profit financially from the Olympic Games.

Coca-Cola, it seems, will sponsor just about anything, as long as it 
sees potential profits.

The 1936 Berlin Olympic Games were used by the Nazis to paint a picture 
of Germany as a peaceful and tolerant Germany, even though the 
persecution of Jews, Romas and others deemed undesirable by the state in 
Germany had already started. The first permanent Nazi concentration camp 
had opened in Dachau in 1933 - three years prior to the Olympics - and 
Jews were not allowed to participate in the Games.

Coca-Cola was a primary sponsor of the 1936 Games. And the first modern 
day Olympic Torch Relay was initiated in Berlin in 1936, and Coca-Cola 
was its sponsor at that time too.

While the magnitude of horror inflicted by Nazi Germany is unsurpassed 
and we hesitate to make comparisons with China's oppression in Tibet, 
one must raise serious concerns about corporate sponsorships that do not 
take human rights concerns into account, as was and is the case with the 
Coca-Cola company.

In fact, Coca-Cola's involvement in Nazi Germany went further. While the 
Coca-Cola company was supplying Coke to Allied soldiers on the war 
front, its German counterpart, Coca-Cola GmbH, was busy selling 
Coca-Cola to Germans. When Coca-Cola GmbH could no longer receive the 
syrup from the US after the US entered the war in 1941, it developed a 
drink using ingredients available in Nazi Germany called Fanta.

It seems that Coca-Cola had hedged its bets. If the Allies won, 
Coca-Cola would rule the world and if the Nazis won, Fanta would.

Olympic Torch Run Arrives in Berlin, 1936
Olympic Torch Run Arrives in Berlin, 1936
To be fair, Coca-Cola was not the only company to hedge its bets during 
World War II. But the extent to which companies will go to ensure future 
markets and profits, however unethical, is disturbing. And Coca-Cola's 
sponsorship of the Olympic Torch Run and the Beijing Games is just that 
- unethical and devoid of morality.

It makes no difference whether Tibetans are murdered, tortured or 
intimidated by the Chinese government. Its mandate is to increase its 
sales in China, and it will do nothing to risk losing access to these 
emerging markets, particularly at a time when its sales in the US are 
declining as consumers become more health savvy.

The current protests around the Olympic Torch Relay are a perfect moment 
to scrutinize the role that corporations play in this day and age of 
globalization and send a clear message to the corporations that human 
rights must come before profits.

On the one hand, there is increased talk of Corporate Social 
Responsibility - which is corporation's response to globalization - in 
which Coca-Cola figures prominently. Yet, when a pressing issue such as 
Tibet comes to the fore, Coca-Cola chooses to remain silent and endorse 
the Games for financial reasons, absurdly citing "openness" and "hope" 
to defend their involvement.

On March 20, 2008, over 150 Tibet support groups from around the world 
penned a letter to the Coca-Cola company labeling its sponsorship of the 
Games "tasteless" and asking it to ensure that the Olympic Torch does 
not go through Tibet.

We are not holding our breath to hear anything positively from the 
Coca-Cola company in this regard.

Many in India are accustomed to Coca-Cola's doublespeak and spin to 
divert attention from the real issues. Ironically, the Coca-Cola company 
has chosen to promote "environmental stewardship" as part of its 
sponsorship of the Olympic Torch Relay. No matter that thousands of 
farmers in India have challenged the company for destroying the 
environment, particularly water resources, that one of its largest 
bottling plants in India has been shut down because of pollution, and 
that its own assessment has confirmed what the communities in India have 
been saying all along.

If we have learnt anything from the past, and the horror of the Nazi 
Germany era, it is incumbent upon us to demand that the Coca-Cola 
company act. At the very least, the company should state publicly that 
the Olympic Torch should not go through Tibet - an unconscionable act, 
according to Tibetan activists. And if Coca-Cola is serious about being 
a good corporate citizen and even an average student of history, it must 
end its sponsorship of the Beijing Olympics to send a strong message 
that financial profits are secondary to human rights.

Until then, we would encourage all torchbearers to cease being 
ambassadors for a company that is blind to everything except profits. 
And encourage consumers to think before they drink Coca-Cola.

Coca-Cola's sponsorship, frankly speaking, is simply not Olympic in spirit.

Amit Srivastava is the Director of India Resource Center, an 
international campaigning organization based in San Francisco, USA.




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