BDS against rapacious Sri Lankan regime

Well done:

A public awareness campaign asking shoppers in Britain to boycott products made in Sri Lanka and sold in popular stores like Marks & Spencer continued last week with several members of the Tamil Youth Organisation (TYO) handing out leaflets and talking to shoppers on Oxford Street Saturday. Similar TYO events took place over the Christmas period in shopping centres in London’s suburbs, mirroring Tamil activists’ campaigns in other parts of the world, and those of other UK-based organisations like ”˜Act Now’. In the midst of the January sales, central London retailers are in their busiest times of the year.


In Harrow, alarmed M&S shop staff came out to meet the campaigners.

“They calmed down when we explained the boycott was aimed at Sri Lankan products, not their company, though of course they still weren’t happy,” an activist said.

Textiles and Garments is Sri Lanka’s biggest export earner with $3.2 billion in 2009 – but garment production has a large imported component, reducing the value-added.

The UK is said to be second largest market (after the United States) for Sri Lanka garments, accounting for 27% of garment exports.

Text and images ©2024 Antony Loewenstein. All rights reserved.

Site by Common