Ken Loach Turns Down Italian Film Prize over Worker Rights

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British director Ken Loach on Wednesday turned down a prize from a festival organised by Italy's National Museum of Cinema in Turin in protest over the rights of cleaners and security guards at the museum.

"It is with great regret that I am obliged to turn down the prize assigned to me by the Turin film festival," the internationally acclaimed filmmaker said in a letter to organizers that was sent by his Italian distributors, BIM Film.

Loach, who is well known for his social activism and films about labor disputes, said workers hired for cleaning and security services at the museum had been mistreated, threatened and sacked after protesting over salary cuts.

"The workers who were worst paid and therefore most vulnerable lost their jobs for opposition to a reduction in pay," he said. "It is unfair that the poorest to pay the price for an economic crisis they are not responsible for."

Loach drew a comparison with his award-winning film "Bread and Roses" (2000) starring Adrien Brody, which is about the struggle for better working conditions and unionization by poorly paid janitors in Los Angeles.

"How could I not respond to a request for solidarity from workers who were sacked for fighting for their rights? Accepting the prize and just making some critical comments would have been weak and hypocritical," he said.

Loach had been due to receive a lifetime achievement award at the festival, which said a screening of his latest film "The Angels' Share" -- a comedy-drama about a young Glaswegian father -- had also been cancelled by BIM Film.

Organizers said that Loach had been "badly informed" about the dispute and his comments "do not correspond in any way with the reality of the facts".

"The museum cannot be considered responsible for the behavior of third parties, either directly or indirectly," the museum said in a statement, adding that it had always engaged in "ethically irreproachable" labor policies.

Alberto Barbera, director of the Turin museum, said he had been taken aback by the decision.

"I couldn't believe it!" Barbera, who is also head of the Venice film festival, told Agence France Presse, saying Loach only informed him on Monday and had received a ticket to attend the festival last month.

"I've known Loach since 1998. We know each other really well" he said, adding: "He's really made a big mistake. He's completely missed the point!"

Italy's economy is stuck in a painful recession and Italians are feeling the pinch from a series of budget cuts and tax rises, leading to an increase in union activism with protests and strikes by workers in many sectors.

The Torino Film Festival runs from November 23 to December 1.

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