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This content is from the original TvindAlert.com (2001-2022), preserved for historical and research purposes. Some images or documents may be unavailable.
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About Tvind clothes recycling
Tvind
is huge in the charity second hand clothes market - one of the world's biggest
players. But there is a twist.
All charities sell donated garments on the world market - it's an important source of income. Tvind is no exception. But Tvind does it differently - instead of selling the clothes on the open market and using the profits, it sells the clothes to its own companies, keeping profits in the organisation and making financial transparency difficult.
Most of the clothes are traded with for-profit companies Garson & Shaw and ConMore bv, both associated with Tvind, or a Teachers Group offshore company Holland House in Gibraltar.
We have evidence - both documentary and in interviews - that the business practises in Tvind used-clothes companies are unorthodox to say the least, and some have routinely used accountancy scams, fake documentation and false declarations to 'cream off' money - almost certainly back to the Teachers Group.
Tvind
is huge in the charity second hand clothes market - one of the world's biggest
players. But there is a twist.
All charities sell donated garments on the world market - it's an important source of income. Tvind is no exception. But Tvind does it differently - instead of selling the clothes on the open market and using the profits, it sells the clothes to its own companies, keeping profits in the organisation and making financial transparency difficult.
Most of the clothes are traded with for-profit companies Garson & Shaw and ConMore bv, both associated with Tvind, or a Teachers Group offshore company Holland House in Gibraltar.
We have evidence - both documentary and in interviews - that the business practises in Tvind used-clothes companies are unorthodox to say the least, and some have routinely used accountancy scams, fake documentation and false declarations to 'cream off' money - almost certainly back to the Teachers Group.
All charities sell donated garments on the world market - it's an important source of income. Tvind is no exception. But Tvind does it differently - instead of selling the clothes on the open market and using the profits, it sells the clothes to its own companies, keeping profits in the organisation and making financial transparency difficult.
Most of the clothes are traded with for-profit companies Garson & Shaw and ConMore bv, both associated with Tvind, or a Teachers Group offshore company Holland House in Gibraltar.
We have evidence - both documentary and in interviews - that the business practises in Tvind used-clothes companies are unorthodox to say the least, and some have routinely used accountancy scams, fake documentation and false declarations to 'cream off' money - almost certainly back to the Teachers Group.
Most of the clothes are traded with for-profit companies Garson & Shaw and ConMore bv, both associated with Tvind, or a Teachers Group offshore company Holland House in Gibraltar.
We have evidence - both documentary and in interviews - that the business practises in Tvind used-clothes companies are unorthodox to say the least, and some have routinely used accountancy scams, fake documentation and false declarations to 'cream off' money - almost certainly back to the Teachers Group.
We have evidence - both documentary and in interviews - that the business practises in Tvind used-clothes companies are unorthodox to say the least, and some have routinely used accountancy scams, fake documentation and false declarations to 'cream off' money - almost certainly back to the Teachers Group.
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