Kylie and Kendall Jenner deny claims their clothing company failed to pay Bangladesh factory workers: 'This is untrue'

Kendall and Kylie Jenner have denied claims that their clothing line failed to pay factory workers in Bangladesh amid the coronavirus pandemic.

In June, Remake, a non-profit organisation dedicated to ethical fashion, claimed that the reality stars’ clothing company Kendall + Kylie was owned by Global Brands Group (GBG), a company it said failed to pay garment workers in Bangladesh for cancelled orders in February and March.

In a letter from Rick Darling, CEO of GBG dated 21 March 2020 and obtained by Remake, he said: “Given the unpredictability of the situation, our retail partners have cancelled orders, and existing inventory and product in production may have no sell-through. Consequently, we have no choice but to make the difficult decision to cancel all S/S 2020 orders from all suppliers (without liability)."

In Remake's article, it referenced GBG’s website, which previously listed Kendall and Kylie's company as part of its portfolios of brands it had worked with, as the link between the two companies.

The accusations were also reposted on the Diet Prada Instagram account, prompting backlash against the sisters’ company.

On Thursday, the reality stars shared a statement on the Kendall + Kylie Instagram account, where they said the claims are “untrue” and that their company is not owned by GBG.

“We would like to address the unfortunate and incorrect rumour that Global Brands Group owns the Kendall + Kylie brand and that we have neglected to pay factory workers in Bangladesh as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic,” the statement reads. “This is untrue.

“The Kendall + Kylie brand is owned by 3072541 Canada Inc, not GBG.”

In the statement, the company explained it had worked with CAA-GBG in the past in a “sales and business development capacity only,” but that the clothing company does “not currently have any relationship at all with GBG.”

Continuing, the Kendall + Kylie team said: “We know that these are trying times for the fashion industry and garment workers as a whole, and we continue to support all of our partners working in the factories who produce our products.”

“We manufacture in countries all over the world and have not received any concerns from the factories who produce our goods,” the company concluded.

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/ Celebrities have joined the #PayUp group chat. (cc @kyliejenner, @kendalljenner, @diddy, @iamcardib) ⠀ In this pandemic, we do not need feel-good philanthropy from Kendall and Kylie Jenner, P. Diddy, and Cardi B. What we need, instead, is good business practices !!! ⠀ Kendall + Kylie, is owned by Global Brands Group, who refused to pay its garment suppliers for orders produced in February and March following a drop in sales caused by the coronavirus pandemic. “Given the unpredictability of the situation, our retail partners have cancelled orders, and existing inventory and product in production may have no sell-through. Consequently, we have no choice but to make the difficult decision to cancel all S/S 2020 orders from all suppliers (without liability),” wrote Rick Darling, CEO of Global Brands Group in a letter dated March 21, 2020. ⠀ However, the fact of the matter is that Global Brands Group does have a choice — it’s just choosing not to implement it. ⠀ Kylie and Kendall aren’t the only celebrity culprits allowed to distance themselves from this devastating truth. Also owned by Global Brands Group? ⠀ P. Diddy’s Sean Jean line. The irony here is difficult to overlook. Recently, P.Diddy launched #OurFairShare, a platform to help minority entrepreneurs access funds in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, which is admirable. ⠀ But we talked to an entrepreneur in Bangladesh, Mostafiz Uddin, of Denim Experts, who runs a sustainable denim factory. Global Brands Group owes him hundreds of thousands of dollars for products his workers made + shipped in February. ⠀ In April, he pleaded w/ Global Brands Group, “Here my workers are hungry, they are being agitated, they are very angry. I have promised them to pay wages. So please please make my payment.” We would hope that P.Diddy, who cares about #COVID19’s disproportionate impact on Black + Brown people, would ensure that his line does the same. Seems only fair.

A post shared by 𝗿𝗲𝗺𝗮𝗸𝗲 (@remakeourworld) on Jun 11, 2020 at 5:58am PDT

GBG, which removed Kylie and Kendall's company’s logo from its site on 24 June, said in a statement to the DailyMail at the time: “CAA-GBG is the Brand Management Division of Global Brands Group (GBG) and does not design or manufacture any product for Kendall + Kylie.”

The Independent has contacted Global Brands Group for comment.

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