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Dior and Armani face antitrust probe in Italy over alleged labor exploitation

Italy’s Competition Authority opened an investigation into some companies controlled by luxury fashion groups Giorgio Armani SpA and LVMH’s Christian Dior over alleged unfair commercial practices.

The antitrust regulator said that the two brands may have used supplies from laboratories which employed workers receiving “inadequate” wages. In addition, these workers sometimes had to work illegally long hours in inadequate health and safety conditions, which was “in contrast to the boasted levels of production excellence” at the brands, the regulator said in a statement Wednesday. 

It is the latest move by authorities in Italy to crack down on alleged unlawful business conduct in the fashion industry. 

In June, a Milan court put a unit of the French fashion house Dior under judicial control citing alleged labor violations in its supply chain. Dior, which produces luxury bags and accessories in Italy, didn’t “prevent and stem labor exploitation within its production cycle,” the Italian police said at the time. 

Similarly, in April a Milan judge placed the manufacturing unit of Armani under the same control for alleged workers exploitation.

On Tuesday, financial police and antitrust officials searched the headquarters of Giorgio Armani SpA, G.A. Operations SpA and Christian Dior Italia, according to the statement. 

Armani and Dior couldn’t immediately be reached for comment. 

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