PETA seeks to pressure LVMH via IOC ahead of Paris Olympics

FUR FLIES: In its ongoing effort to get fashion brands to stop using exotic fur and skins, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals is turning to the International Olympic Committee for support ahead of the Paris Olympic Games in 2024.

In a letter to IOC President Thomas Bach on Monday, the animal rights group's vice-chair for the UK, Europe and Australia, Mimi Bekhechi, urged the committee to “only accept sponsorship from LVMH or any other fashion company if they agree to stop selling exotic fur and skins,” citing these materials as sources of risk for future pandemics.

The Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games were postponed to July 2021 due to the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics were held behind closed doors, with little or no spectators.

Although LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton supported Paris' bid in 2016 to host the next Summer Olympics, no sponsorship agreement has been announced between the committee in charge of organizing the Games in Paris and the luxury group. Confirmed sponsors of the 2024 Olympics include state-owned bank BPCE, retailer Carrefour and telecommunications company Orange.

Related Galleries

Bekhechi said the COVID-19 virus had “spread like wildfire” in fur farms, where cramped conditions “had accelerated the spread [of the virus] to humans and animals wild,” including “a dangerous mutation that threatened the effectiveness of vaccines.”

She further alleged that the French luxury conglomerate is "well aware" that the animals are "enduring conditions comparable to those of wet markets in Wuhan, where the COVID-19 pandemic is believed to have originated", and refers to past claims about how workers in LVMH's supply chain killed pythons, according to a PETA Asia investigation.

Quoting fashion houses like Chanel, which in 2018 said they were ending the use of exotic skins, Bekhechi said LVMH "has so far failed to act responsibly and continues to put endangering public health with its mink coats and python bags".< /p>

"It would be unconscionable for the next Olympics to be sponsored by a company that supports these dangerous industries," she continued, calling the proposed requirement "a matter of global social responsibility."

The International Olympic Committee and Paris 2024 Organizing Committee did not respond to requests for comment on Monday.

In February, Louis Vuitton reinforced its commitment to using exotic skins in its handbags, with the official inauguration of its last two leather goods workshops in Loir-et-Cher, in central France.

PETA seeks to pressure LVMH via IOC ahead of Paris Olympics

FUR FLIES: In its ongoing effort to get fashion brands to stop using exotic fur and skins, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals is turning to the International Olympic Committee for support ahead of the Paris Olympic Games in 2024.

In a letter to IOC President Thomas Bach on Monday, the animal rights group's vice-chair for the UK, Europe and Australia, Mimi Bekhechi, urged the committee to “only accept sponsorship from LVMH or any other fashion company if they agree to stop selling exotic fur and skins,” citing these materials as sources of risk for future pandemics.

The Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games were postponed to July 2021 due to the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics were held behind closed doors, with little or no spectators.

Although LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton supported Paris' bid in 2016 to host the next Summer Olympics, no sponsorship agreement has been announced between the committee in charge of organizing the Games in Paris and the luxury group. Confirmed sponsors of the 2024 Olympics include state-owned bank BPCE, retailer Carrefour and telecommunications company Orange.

Related Galleries

Bekhechi said the COVID-19 virus had “spread like wildfire” in fur farms, where cramped conditions “had accelerated the spread [of the virus] to humans and animals wild,” including “a dangerous mutation that threatened the effectiveness of vaccines.”

She further alleged that the French luxury conglomerate is "well aware" that the animals are "enduring conditions comparable to those of wet markets in Wuhan, where the COVID-19 pandemic is believed to have originated", and refers to past claims about how workers in LVMH's supply chain killed pythons, according to a PETA Asia investigation.

Quoting fashion houses like Chanel, which in 2018 said they were ending the use of exotic skins, Bekhechi said LVMH "has so far failed to act responsibly and continues to put endangering public health with its mink coats and python bags".< /p>

"It would be unconscionable for the next Olympics to be sponsored by a company that supports these dangerous industries," she continued, calling the proposed requirement "a matter of global social responsibility."

The International Olympic Committee and Paris 2024 Organizing Committee did not respond to requests for comment on Monday.

In February, Louis Vuitton reinforced its commitment to using exotic skins in its handbags, with the official inauguration of its last two leather goods workshops in Loir-et-Cher, in central France.

What's Your Reaction?

like

dislike

love

funny

angry

sad

wow