
Italy cracks down on sweatshops feeding Loro Piana, Armani, Dior
The crackdown, led by Milan's corporate court and the labor-crimes unit of the Carabinieri military police, has snared contractors linked to five well-known fashion labels including Valentino, Armani and Dior.
Loro Piana, owned by French luxury powerhouse LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE, became the latest on Monday, and was placed under court supervision for up to a year.
'There is already a reputational issue in the fashion industry, which started with prices spiraling unreasonably,' said Stefania Saviolo, a lecturer on fashion and luxury management at Milan's Bocconi University. 'These investigations not only damage the brands involved, they affect all of Made in Italy as a system.'
Loro Piana, part of LVMH since 2013, denied wrongdoing and said it will cooperate with authorities. The company said it terminated relations with the supplier within 24 hours of being informed of the contractors' existence.
The fragmented, mostly family-run structure of high-quality Italian manufacturing 'can pose challenges in transparency and oversight,' said Toni Belloni, president of LVMH Italy. The group has strengthened controls and revised its internal charter, he said in a statement to Bloomberg News. 'However, areas of fragility remain, so we must work to improve our practices.'
The fashion industry is one of Italy's biggest, accounting for about €96 billion worth of Made in Italy products in 2024, according to industry group Camera Nazionale della Moda. The vast majority are destined for overseas markets.
Yet the tailor's case shines a light on the treatment of workers who make garments that can cost thousands. He worked from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily through late 2024, when his 'caporale,' or boss — also a Chinese transplant — stopped paying him for unknown reasons, according to the court documents.
After repeated demands for his wages, a confrontation ensued. The employer punched the tailor and beat him repeatedly with an aluminum tube, the documents said, leading to a criminal complaint.
Past enforcement efforts have failed to stamp out labor abuses.
'These cases have been increasing in the last few years, with more big groups taking control of smaller Italian companies and starting outsourcing part of the production,' said Roberta Griffini, secretary for the Filctem CGIL Milano union.
Responsibility is sometimes hard to determine because subcontractors work for more than one fashion group, Griffini added.
The UK has also cracked down on illegal sweatshops, particularly small factories operating in cities such as Leicester. A 2021 UK report found companies in numerous industries couldn't guarantee their supply chains were free from forced labor.
For fashion producers in Italy, the supply chain should be short and closely monitored, said Saviolo of Bocconi University. Younger consumers in particular are paying more attention to brand credibility.
Milan is the locus of the sprawling fashion industry in Italy, housing about one-fourth of the nation's 600,000 fashion workers across some 60,000 companies, according to Camera Nazionale della Moda.
The Lombardy region's dense ecosystem of design studios, tanneries and sample makers gives brands unrivaled speed but also shelters what prosecutors called 'a generalised manufacturing method' in which legitimate subcontractors parcel out work to micro-factories operating from converted garages and semi-legal industrial parks.
Chinese-owned firms make up a significant part of this complex. About 20% of Lombardy's 10,000-plus textile workshops and factories are Chinese-owned, according to Milan's Chamber of Commerce. The area has drawn a large number of Chinese immigrants, driven by small-business opportunities, globalization of the fashion industry and growing family ties.
The judicial clampdown in Italy is unfolding against a jittery global backdrop, with demand falling and a US-led tariff war threatening to magnify export costs.
The personal luxury-goods industry, worth €364 billion, lost 50 million customers in 2023 and 2024, Bain estimated last year. The sector will shrink between 2% and 5% this year, according to the consulting firm's June follow-up.
Italy's fashion industry was already grappling with falling sales, inflation and international tensions. Brands squeezed by softer demand and volatile costs have doubled down on 'near-shoring' quick orders to Lombardy's workshop belt to protect margins.
That very strategy, say prosecutors, is fueling the race to the bottom that the courts are now trying to halt.
Investigators traced Loro Piana's knitwear to intermediaries which subcontracted to factories where illegal migrants worked 90 hours a week and slept next to their sewing machines. The judges said the firm 'negligently benefited' from illegal cost-cutting.
The judicial administrator appointed Monday is tasked with monitoring Loro Piana management's progress toward addressing its supply chain.
The issues have been similar at other luxury brands, including Giorgio Armani Operations, Dior Manufactures, Valentino Bags Lab and Alviero Martini: opaque layers of small subcontractors, paper safety records and a workforce of mostly undocumented Chinese migrants.
Armani, Dior and Alviero Martini were released of court oversight after implementing measures such as real-time supplier audits. The unit of Valentino, which is owned by Kering SA and Qatar's Mayhoola, is still subject to court monitoring.
The Italian Competition Authority has also been involved. In May it closed an unfair-practices probe into Dior, securing €2 million in funds for anti-exploitation initiatives and requiring the company to improve supplier vetting.
Dior noted then that no infringement was established, and said it is dedicated to high standards of ethics and excellence.
Armani Group, still under investigation by the competition authority over alleged unfair commercial practices, said the allegations have no merit and its companies are cooperating with authorities.
In Milan, coordination has tightened with an accord in May between the Milan Prefecture, the fashion chamber, trade unions and leading brands. The pact sets up a shared database of vetted suppliers and commits signatories to regular certifications.
The outcome of the Loro Piana case for now rests with updates to the bench on its progress.
As for the tailor, the Milan prosecutor is now trying to get him hired legally, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be named discussing a personal matter. This would require the employer to make pension contributions, pay taxes and provide standard benefits.
Hashtags

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

LeMonde
5 hours ago
- LeMonde
French hostages in Iran are at mercy of regime's bargaining
It was close to noon in Tehran on June 23 when Cécile Kohler heard the first explosion. The sound of a second, then a third, soon followed. The walls of the tiny cell in Evin prison, where the literature teacher has been locked up for three years, shook. Just a few meters away, in the men's section, Jacques Paris, her 72-year-old partner who was arrested with her in May 2022, grew frantic as fellow inmates were wounded by shrapnel and shards of glass. Chaos and panic ensued. The guards gathered the political prisoners from Section 209, tied them together in pairs, and transferred them to Tehran-Bozorg penitentiary in the south of the capital, as Israeli bombs continued to rain down on the city. "I thought I was going to die," Kohler later told the chargé d'affaires at the French embassy in Iran during a consular visit granted a week later on July 1. Since the Israeli strikes, their actual place of detention is unknown. Terrified by the attacks, the 40-year-old woman was barely sleeping. "Every night, she hears explosions," her sister Noémie Kohler said by phone. Are they phantom noises or real gunfire? The family lives in anxiety and uncertainty. After three years in detention, Kohler and Paris were indicted in late June by a revolutionary court for "espionage on behalf of Mossad [Israeli intelligence services]," "plotting to overthrow the government" and "corruption on earth" – charges that carry the death penalty. Is there any hope for release? "We no longer believe in it," sighed Noémie Kohler. The couple has now been joined by Lennart Monterlos, an 18-year-old French-German cyclist, arrested "for an offense," according to Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghtchi in an interview with Le Monde on July 10, without providing further details. A fourth French citizen has recently been arrested in Iran, Le Monde has learned, though neither the Iranian authorities nor Paris has disclosed any information

LeMonde
18 hours ago
- LeMonde
Avignon staging of Pelicot trial brings theater of the real to a new height
Four hours of breathless intensity. Rarely have we witnessed such focus, such unity between actors and audience, such a sense of urgency in a theater. Bringing the landmark Pelicot rape trial to the stage requires meeting the gravity of a historic legal moment. That was certainly the case on Friday, July 18, in Avignon, during this one-off performance presented by Swiss director Milo Rau. His show, Le Procès Pelicot ("The Pelicot Trial"), will remain in the annals as a model for what theater of the real can be. How could four months of courtroom proceedings that deeply shook French society and reverberated far beyond its borders be condensed into four hours on stage? How could all traces of spectacle or sensationalism be avoided? Rau and his dramaturge, Servane Dècle, answered these questions with unwavering rigor and absolute faith in the power of theater, an art form intrinsically tied to justice since its Greek origins. Just a stone's throw from the Avignon courthouse where the trial was held, the Cloître des Carmes, a major venue of the festival, served as the perfect setting to replay the trial's pivotal moments and to reflect on the unfathomable events that unfolded over more than a decade in a quiet village in southern France. No set was needed; everything unfolded through spoken word. On a bare stage, two rows of wooden benches positioned at stage left and right, as in a courtroom, held the actors dressed in dark colors. At center stage, a small table behind which two actresses stood, serving as both narrators and as the presiding judge and vice president of the court.


Local France
a day ago
- Local France
'Witnesses to despair': Marseille sees poverty fuel cocaine problem
The scene, on the central Belsunce Square near the busy Old Port, plays out daily, an illustration of the second-biggest French city's massive drug problem. On pavements, in doorways and in parking lots, more users than ever can be seen shooting up cocaine or smoking crack. Many aimlessly wander the streets of the Mediterranean port city, which became notorious decades ago for its role as a heroin hub in the so-called "French connection" trade route, and today cannot get a grip on a thriving narcotics business. At lunchtime, a man lay sprawled on the street outside the parking lot of a shopping centre, two needles sticking out of his right arm. "You see more and more young people and women," said Youcef Mahi, a janitor. "I'm not judging. We are witnesses to despair." Crack 'drives you crazy' The city's budget for cleaning up after the addicts has risen six-fold to reach €152,000 ($177,000) this year, outweighing public subsidies for NGOs dedicated to reducing risks for drug users. But Antoine Henry, who runs the ASUD association to keep addicts safe, said more money should be funnelled into projects such as his. By his estimates, "2,000 users live in the streets of central Marseille, most of them without a home or income, often carrying infections, with no access to benefits, and sometimes undocumented." He said the sharp increase is partly due to overall rising poverty in what is already France's lowest-income large city, with the proliferation of downtown dealing spots over the past two years also to blame. Such spots are outposts of the main dealing rings located in low-income housing estates, and closer to socially vulnerable consumers who buy their cocaine there, usually for €10 ($11.60) a pop. On one Marseille street, a young lookout, called "chouf" (Arabic for 'look'), had taken up his post, only a few dozen metres from the main Canebiere thoroughfare and its municipal police headquarters. One 36-year-old woman, who did not want to be identified, told AFP that she lives in the street, except when she is in prison. She was seriously ill, shivering below her parka despite the hot July sun. She shoots cocaine, but does not smoke crack because, she said, "that drives you crazy". She said she tries to stay clear of police and doctors, but also of dealers and their gangland fights and shootouts. Marseille and its surrounding region are plagued by a turf war over lucrative drug points. In 2023, 49 deaths linked to drug trafficking were recorded in Marseille in connection with gang warfare, and 24 in 2024. Advertisement Clean syringes, rapid tests Joachim Levy regularly seeks out the woman when he and his colleagues from the Nouvelle Aube (New Dawn) association roam the streets in search of people in need of help. He has constantly urged her to accept treatment. "Otherwise you're going to die here," he said. At the foot of a building, a small group, like dozens of others in the neighbourhood, was cooking crack and crushing pills. In contrast to Paris, crack is rarely sold ready to consume here. Instead, users concoct it themselves by heating cocaine with ammonia. From his backpack, Levy handed out sealed syringes, pipes, disinfectant wipes and bicarbonate, which he said is "less harmful" than ammonia. A few streets away, a team from Nouvelle Aube were talking with men sheltering under the A7 highway. "We offer rapid testing for HIV and hepatitis -- and direct them to the hospital if needed. They no longer have their own survival strategies," said Marie-Lou, a member of the association who did not give her surname. Advertisement 'Poverty, isolation' A young woman, wearing glittery sneakers, a tight skirt and a handbag, turned a staircase corner. She told Levy about her mounting debt and her temporary accommodation with her child "at an ex's place". She used to smoke, and "snort a little", but then she turned to crack and soon realised she "was hooked". Levy told the woman "to call anytime". The biggest problem for people in her situation, he said, is not the actual drug use. "It's the poverty, the isolation, the street violence, the mental health issues -- this is where we need to start," he said. Levy believes supervised consumption facilities -- spaces where users can take their drugs safely -- could be "an excellent solution" to some of these issues. Such "shoot-up rooms", as critics often call them, operate in several countries, including Germany, Norway, the Netherlands and Australia. Advertisement No 'shoot-up room' Perrine Roux is research director at the INSERM health and medical research body, which has published an evaluation of France's only two experimental facilities in Paris and Strasbourg. "All scientific studies, in France and abroad, have shown the usefulness of such facilities," she said. "But nobody pays much attention to science, and that's very concerning." The interior ministry shut down a plan to open such a facility in Marseille after complaints from some residents and local politicians. On Thursday, the regional prefect announced an action plan against drug trafficking and related crimes, involving the deployment of additional police and anti-riot units "to give the dealing points a pounding", and of 310 extra security cameras. Meanwhile in Belsunce Square, the water fountain has stopped working, a fact welcomed by one resident. "Now that there's no water for them anymore, we may see less of the druggies," she said.