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هذه الصفحة غير متوفرة باللغة العربية وهي معروضة باللغة English

المقال

25 إبريل 2012

الكاتب:
compiled by Business & Human Rights Resource Centre

Protests over the Bahrain Grand Prix 2012

Business & Human Rights Resource Centre invited the following companies, teams and organizations to respond to…[human rights] concerns about the race. Below are the responses we have received, and an indication of which companies and organizations have not responded. Below the list are the items we are asking them to respond to. [refers to Acer, Allianz, Alpinestars, Casio, CNBC, Dell, Falcon Private Bank, Fiat, GE, Gillette / Procter & Gamble, Hackett, Head & Shoulders / Procter & Gamble, Hilton HHonors, Hugo Boss / Valentino Fashion Group, Kingfisher Airlines / UB Group, Mitsubishi Electric, NEC, NetApp, Philip Morris Intl., Pirelli, Santander, Siemens, TAG Heuer / LVMH, Tata Motors, Telmex, Thomson Reuters, UB Group, Virgin, Visa, Whyte & Mackay / UB Group, Cosworth, McLaren, HRT-Cosworth, Lotus-Renault, Marussia-Cosworth, McLaren-Mercedes, Sauber-Ferrari, STR-Ferrari, Formula One Group of Companies, CVC Capital Partners, JP Morgan, CNN, Deutsche Post DHL, Intel, Johnnie Walker / Diageo, Microsoft, Petronas, Reebok / adidas Group, Shell, Total, Vodafone, Volkswagen, Ferrari, Mercedes / Daimler, Renault, Caterham F1, Red Bull Racing, Williams F1]

Part of the following timelines

Business & Human Rights Resource Centre press release: Only 29% of Formula One companies respond to human rights concerns

Sponsors of Formula One "have been left squirming" after Bahrain Grand Prix goes ahead amid human rights concerns

Protests over the Bahrain Grand Prix 2012