FIRST Union General Secretary Dennis Maga has welcomed this morning’s announcement from Minister of Workplace Relations
and Safety, Carmel Sepuloni, that legislation will be brought forward to help end modern slavery in our country’s supply
chains, but he cautioned that employers’ ‘due diligence’ obligations have been omitted from the new legislation for now
and must be included with some urgency if the policy is to be successful.
"We’ve worked with Government for two years on the development of modern slavery legislation and are proud to see
concrete action outlined today to clean up Aotearoa’s supply chains," said Dennis Maga, FIRST Union General Secretary.
"In 2021, the Global Slavery index estimated that around 8,000 people were in conditions of modern slavery in New
Zealand, but exploitation and slavery in the international supply chains of Kiwi businesses has been far more
prevalent."
"The new obligations for employers to disclose their discovery of modern slavery conditions in their supply chains are
important, but due diligence - the idea that employers must proactively investigate the various aspects of their
business’s supply chain - has not yet been included in the proposed laws."
"Due diligence would truly stop businesses from turning a blind eye, because under the proposed system, a company could
simply ‘not discover’ an instance of exploitation in their supply chain, for example, and therefore not need to report
it."
Mr Maga said FIRST Union will continue to engage on proposed legislation and will urge the Government to make due
diligence a key focus in the coming months, especially since implementation of modern slavery legislation was already
expected to take six months.