Our Foreign Staff
Thu, 2 November 2023
Protesters carry 'Boycott Nestle' placards as they take part in a demonstration against the Russian invasion of Ukraine last March
- LAURENT GILLIERON/EPA-EFE/SHUTTERSTOCK
Kyiv has named Swiss food giant Nestle as a “sponsor of war” over the Kit Kat-maker’s continued operations in Russia.
Hundreds of Western firms quit the Russian market following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in February last year, and Kyiv has not shied away from publicly criticising those that have remained.
“Despite Russian aggression, Nestle continues to operate in Russia, supply goods to the aggressor and expand its Russian production base,” Ukraine’s national anti-corruption agency said on Thursday.
“This is the basis for the company being entered into the list of international sponsors of war,” it added.
When asked to comment on the move, Nestle referred it to a previous statement, in which the company said it had “drastically reduced” its portfolio in Russia.
The Swiss company owns dozens of food and drink brands including Nescafe - KONSTANTIN ZAVRAZHIN/GETTY
Those comments also said the company had cancelled all future investment, halted advertising and was “fully complying with all applicable international sanctions”.
Nestle owns dozens of household food and drink brands, from Nescafe and Nestea to Haagen-Dazs ice cream and Purina pet food.
“We stand with the people of Ukraine and our 5,500 employees there,” a statement on Nestle’s website reads.
It says its operations in Russia are “focused on providing essential and basic foods to the local people”.
Nestle employed around 7,000 people in Russia before the war and its 2022 annual report says it had six factories in the country.
Kyiv has named Swiss food giant Nestle as a “sponsor of war” over the Kit Kat-maker’s continued operations in Russia.
Hundreds of Western firms quit the Russian market following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in February last year, and Kyiv has not shied away from publicly criticising those that have remained.
“Despite Russian aggression, Nestle continues to operate in Russia, supply goods to the aggressor and expand its Russian production base,” Ukraine’s national anti-corruption agency said on Thursday.
“This is the basis for the company being entered into the list of international sponsors of war,” it added.
When asked to comment on the move, Nestle referred it to a previous statement, in which the company said it had “drastically reduced” its portfolio in Russia.
The Swiss company owns dozens of food and drink brands including Nescafe - KONSTANTIN ZAVRAZHIN/GETTY
Those comments also said the company had cancelled all future investment, halted advertising and was “fully complying with all applicable international sanctions”.
Nestle owns dozens of household food and drink brands, from Nescafe and Nestea to Haagen-Dazs ice cream and Purina pet food.
“We stand with the people of Ukraine and our 5,500 employees there,” a statement on Nestle’s website reads.
It says its operations in Russia are “focused on providing essential and basic foods to the local people”.
Nestle employed around 7,000 people in Russia before the war and its 2022 annual report says it had six factories in the country.
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