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Showing 681-693 result returned for "all at sea"
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News & Media
Jul 25, 2011Security Council under fire over climate changeRead
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News & Media
Jul 08, 2011Ceremony held to open new EJF office in Bonthe, Sierra LeoneRead
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News & Media
Apr 30, 2011A Global Ban on EndosulfanRead
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News & Media
Apr 20, 2011Fish worth £4m seized in EU crackdown on illegal fishingRead
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News & Media
Feb 23, 2011EJF invited by UK Government to discuss Uzbek cottonRead
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News & Media
Jan 24, 2011More Endosulfan victims in IndiaRead
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News & Media
Oct 10, 2010Government recognition for EJFRead
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News & Media
Sep 30, 2010EJF releases new reportRead
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News & Media
Sep 30, 2010The Guardian: Modern day slavery in the fishing industryRead
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News & Media
Sep 16, 2010EJF’s boat involved in rescue at seaRead
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Reports
Jan 01, 2010All At SeaRead
The report provides case studies from West Africa, Southeast Asia, the Indian and Pacific Oceans, all regions with high incidences of illegal fishing. Human rights abuses directly documented by EJF and other organisations, including the International Transport Workers Federation (ITF), include physical and emotional abuse, incarceration, forced labour without pay, abandonment, and reports of murder.
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Reports
Dec 31, 2005White Gold: The True Cost of CottonRead
This internationally acclaimed report exposes how the billion-dollar cotton industry is causing an environmental catastrophe and human rights abuses in Uzbekistan, Central Asia.
White Gold highlights the disastrous demise of the Aral Sea as the rivers that once fed it have been diverted to irrigate cotton fields. The report also draws attention to the endemic use of forced child labour in the annual cotton harvest. Uzbekistan is unique for the scale of forced child labour - hundreds of thousands of children are forced to labour in the fields undergoing arduous work for little or no pay.
Detailed investigations by EJF expose the use of cotton revenues in Uzbekistan to support a corrupt, brutal and coercive dictatorship.
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Reports
Feb 02, 2004Desert in the DeltaRead
The report summarises the abuses and problems associated with shrimp production in Bangladesh, while defining potential solutions. Researched over an 18-month period, it incorporates over 250 references and, crucially, the personal testimony of Bangladeshi individuals directly affected by the shrimp industry.
This report is one of a series documenting EJF’s international investigations into the social, economic and environmental impacts resulting from shrimp production and consumption.