Remember, items must meet Sweet Repeats standards ( spring/summer items, current styles) and item limits ( no less than 30 items and no more than 90 items). Then you will receive a check for your sales and pick up any of your unsold items during our pick up dates.
You will drop off with your assigned tagger ( no later than Friday, September 2nd, and they will iron, tag and price your items to sell. You will prepare your items to sell ( launder clothes, place together outfits that need to be sold together and clean toys) and gather needed hangers ( preferably wire hangers) and batteries ( if needed).
Once accepted, you will receive a PayPal invoice for the registration fee. We have limited availability and spots will be filled on a first come, first serve basis. You will need to email to request this service. You must consign at least 30 items ( with no more than 15 of them being sized newborn to 12 months), and no more than 90 items total, in order to qualify for this service. You will receive 50% of your sales without having to do the work! All other supplies will be taken care of out of your registration fee. You will need to provide your tagger with hangers (preferably wire hangers) and batteries (if needed). The registration fee for VIP Tagging is $18 to help cover supplies. Use Sweet Repeats' VIP Tagging service to help with your needs! “The United Nations, the European Union, and influential governments should not merely denounce red-tagging, but publicly call on President Duterte to end this deadly practice.Short on time but still have some great things to sell? We will do all of the tagging work for you! Sit back, relax and make $$$. “Red-tagging is a key component of the Philippine government’s abusive campaign against critical activists, journalists, and politicians,” Conde said. Cong Corrales, editor of the Mindanao Gold Star Daily, a newspaper in the southern Philippines, says he and has family have been accused of being communist supporters because of his writing. Mylene Cabalona, president of the BPO Industry Employees’ Network, says that her work to advocate for the welfare of call-center workers has led to threats online, including accusations of rebel links.
In the Human Rights Watch video, Cristina Palabay, secretary-general of Karapatan, describes how she was harassed and threatened with rape and violence as part of the red-tagging. The United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights has denounced these killings. Karapatan, a domestic human rights group whose members are often targets of red-tagging, says that dozens of red-tagged activists have been killed or arrested. Domestic human rights groups contend that the task force’s red-tagging often precipitates violence against those named. It carries out red-tagging through its social media posts and official pronouncements.Ĭivil society groups have called for the task force to be defunded or abolished. The task force is composed of, and headed by, former military officials.
Duterte created the National Task Force on Ending Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC), with billions of pesos at its disposal, making red-tagging his government’s official policy. Red-tagging has become deadlier since Rodrigo Duterte became president in 2016. “Red-tagging is rapidly shrinking the space for peaceful activism in the Philippines.” “Red-tagging is a pernicious practice that targets people who often end up being harassed or even killed,” said Carlos Conde, senior Philippines researcher at Human Rights Watch. The Philippine military has long been responsible for large numbers of extrajudicial killings and torture of alleged communists. The government’s counterinsurgency efforts include publicly accusing activists, journalists, politicians, and others and their organizations of being directly involved in the fighting or supporting the NPA. Red-tagging, also known as red-baiting, has been used for decades in the Philippines in the government’s campaign against the communist New People’s Army (NPA), which began in 1969. The video features a human rights activist, a workers’ rights advocate, and a journalist whom the authorities have red-tagged. (Manila) – The Philippine government should end the “red-tagging” of activists as rebels or supporters of the communist insurgency, Human Rights Watch said today, releasing a video about the threatening practice and its impact.