Co-op to stop sourcing carrots from Israel to ‘support peace and co-operation'
Co-op is to stop sourcing carrots from Israel, among other products from 'countries of concern', to 'support peace and co-operation', it has announced.
The supermarket chain said it will stop sourcing relationships with countries where there are 'internationally recognised community-wide human rights abuses and violations of international law'.
The policy says that, wherever possible, the grocer will not use ingredients in Co-op branded products or sell whole products from 17 countries of concern.
Products and ingredients on the prohibited list include Russian vodka, mangoes from Mali and carrots from Israel.
They will be removed from Co-op shelves and products on a phased basis, starting this month.
The supermarket said the policy had been approved by the Co-op Group Board and coincided with the start of Co-op Fortnight in the UK.
It followed a year of 'detailed analysis' and was based on three criteria: agreement across respected assessments of behaviour which would constitute community-wide human rights abuses or violations of international law; that the actions Co-op could take would make a difference to those affected; and that the grocer's actions would not negatively affect its integrity as a commercially successful business aligned with co-operative values and principles.
Over recent years, Co-op members had made clear through surveys, engagement and motions that conflict was one of their biggest concerns and that 'their Co-op should do all it can to advocate and build peace', it said.
Debbie White, chairwoman of the Co-op Group Board, said: 'This policy – which has been developed over the past year as a part of our Hate Divides Communities, Co-operation Builds Them campaign – is a clear demonstration of our co-operative values in action, where the voices of our members have been listened to and then acted upon.
'We are committed, where we can, to removing products and ingredients from our shelves which are sourced from those countries where the international consensus demonstrates there is not alignment with what happens in those countries and our co-operative values and principles.
'As a business, we have a long-standing legacy of doing the right thing, supporting Fairtrade and championing ethical sourcing, and this policy is a natural progression of this.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Axios
38 minutes ago
- Axios
Communicators and marketers battle for the brand
There's a push-pull between creating cultural relevance and avoiding corporate risk, and that tension was on display last week at Cannes Lions. Why it matters: Those two concepts are often at odds and add to the strained relations between marketing and communications. State of play: Throughout the week, I was having two very different conversations with communicators and marketers. While CMOs were focused on grabbing attention with creative — and expensive — partnerships, CCOs were talking about staying under the radar to avoid stakeholder backlash and potential reputational exposure. In short, CMOs want breakthrough, while CCOs want cover. By the numbers: CEOs, for the most part, seem to be more aligned with the CCO train of thought. A new McKinsey & Co. study found that marketing and other parts of the business are increasingly disconnected, and only 31% of CMOs believe their CEOs are comfortable with modern marketing strategies. CMOs are also losing ground at the decision-making table. Forrester Research found that only 63% of Fortune 500 companies have a marketing leader who sits on the leadership team and reports directly to the CEO. Meanwhile, the number of CMOs at Fortune 500 companies is down from 71% in 2023 to 66% in 2024, per Spencer Stuart. What they're saying: Heightened political polarization, economic instability, AI advancements and cultural tension have made this moment more complex than ever, Weber Shandwick global president Jim O'Leary said at an Axios event in Cannes. It's the battle between "cultural relevancy and cultural resilience," he said. "And I think that it's been a challenge for some companies to navigate that complexity." But it has led to brands being more purposeful and less performative, by tying their brand campaigns to action or back to the business, as opposed to just capitalizing on a marketing moment, he added. Between the lines: At the heart of it, communicators and corporate affairs professionals are wary that one shallow marketing campaign could do years of reputational harm. Look no further than Bud Light and Target, which were still top of mind for many in attendance last week. "I think that for a long time, people were convinced that trust was the only thing that really mattered with reputation, that it was almost a binary — are you trusted or not trusted? And of course, for anyone sitting inside of a company or a brand, you know that there are a multitude a multitude of levers that make up reputation," said Burson global CEO Corey duBrowa. "It's not just what you say, it's what you do, and how that ties to values," he added. What to watch: The shifting organizational structures of communication and marketing teams, and which function truly owns "brand." "What's exciting about this moment as communicators is we're finally seeing a true opportunity to try to integrate brand strategy with reputation strategy, with marketing and anything that is more enterprise wide strategy," said Chris Foster, CEO of Omnicom Public Relations Group.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Russia to mass produce hypersonic ballistic missile to compete with US weapons, Putin says
Moscow is set to mass produce its new hypersonic ballistic missile capable of carrying nuclear warheads, which Russian President Vladimir Putin touted as a weapon capable of besting any US-made system. Putin ordered officials to ramp up production of the Oreshnik intermediate-range missile this week, which made a shocking debut last November when it was used to attack a Ukrainian military site in Dnipro. 'Serial production of the latest Oreshnik medium-range missile system is under way,' Putin told graduating military cadets in Moscow. 5 Russian President Vladimir Putin said the Kremlin was mass producing the new Oreshnik hypersonic missile. AP 5 The missile is capable of carrying nuclear warheads to targets up to 3,425 miles away. Anadolu via Getty Images The Oreshnik — Russian for 'hazel tree' — was studied by Kyiv and appeared to be based on Moscow's RS-26 Rubezh intercontinental ballistic missile, capable of carrying either conventional or nuclear warheads up to 3,425 miles. The range of the weapon would allow Moscow to launch nuclear weapons anywhere in Europe and even the western United States. Putin greenlit the rocket's use on November 21 in direct response to the use of US- and British-made cruise missiles inside Russian territory. The Russian strongman had claimed that the West has no way of counteracting the hypersonic weapon, warning that the Kremlin could seek the atomic option if it's attacked by ballistic missiles from a nation backed by a nuclear superpower. 5 Moscow began testing it's intercontinental ballistic missiles against Ukraine last fall. AP 5 Ukrainian rescue workers put out a fire after Russia used the missile against Dnipro in November. Ukrainian Emergency Service Putin followed up the threat last December, when he suggested the Oreshnik would win in a duel against America's defense systems. He also claimed Russia would set up a missile base for the Oreshnik's in Belarus come 2025, which directly borders Poland, a NATO member nation. US officials dismissed Putin's boasting at the time, saying the missile was not the game-changer Moscow claimed it to be and suggesting Russia only possessed a handful of Oreshniks. Putin's talk of mass producing the weapons comes as Ukrainian forces halted Russia's advancements along the Sumy region, stopping 50,000 Moscow troops from claiming further territory as the war enters a new quagmire, according to Kyiv's top military commander. 5 A Ukrainian investigator displays debris from the Russian ballistic missile. REUTERS Despite the slowing advancement on the ground, Moscow has kept up its aerial barrages, launching hundreds of drones and missiles over the border and leading to civilian casualties in Ukraine. At the same time Russia carries on its invasion of Ukraine and threats of nuclear attacks on the West, it is also calling on Iran to cooperate with the United Nations' nuclear watchdog group to maintain peace in the Middle East. After Iran's parliament voted to suspect cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency on Wednesday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov called on Tehran's National Security Council to strike the bill down. 'We are interested in Iran's cooperation with the IAEA continuing,' he told reporters Thursday. 'We are interested in everyone respecting the Supreme Leader of Iran, who has repeatedly stated that Iran does not and will not have plans to create nuclear weapons,' he added. With Post wires

3 hours ago
North Korea may send military construction workers to Russia as early as July or August
SEOUL, South Korea -- North Korea's planned dispatch of thousands of military construction workers and deminers to Russia's Kursk region will likely take place as early as July or August, South Korea's spy agency told lawmakers Thursday. After a meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Pyongyang last week, top Russian security official Sergei Shoigu said Kim decided to send 1,000 sappers and 5,000 military construction workers to help rebuild the war-torn area. North Korea has already provided combat troops and ammunition to support Russia's war efforts against Ukraine. On Thursday, South Korea's National Intelligence Service told a closed-door parliamentary committee meeting that the dispatch of those 6,000 additional military personnel will likely come as early as July or August, according to Lee Seong Kweun, one of the lawmakers who attended the meeting. Lee cited the NIS as saying that North Korea has begun recruiting soldiers to be sent to Russia. He told reporters the NIS noted that North Korea's dispatch of combat troops last year came about one month after Shoigu visited North Korea and signed an agreement with Pyongyang officials. In April, Pyongyang and Moscow announced that their soldiers fought together to repel a Ukrainian incursion into Russia's Kursk border region. The two countries haven't disclosed how many North Koreans soldiers have been deployed in Russia, but South Korea, U.S. and Ukraine officials said North Korea last fall sent about 10,000-12,000 troops to Russia. South Korea said North Korea deployed about 3,000-4,000 additional soldiers to Russia earlier this year. In return for North Korea's supply of troops and weapons, Russia is believed to have given North Korea military and economic assistance. South Korea, the U.S. and their allies are concerned that Russia could even transfer sensitive technologies that can enhance North Korea's nuclear program. In its briefing Thursday, the NIS said it believed Russia has sent North Korea air defense systems, electronic jamming equipment and technological knowhow for space rocket engines, drones and missile guidance as well as unspecified economic help.