(CNN) โ Furniture giant IKEA has agreed to pay 6 million euros ($6.5 million) towards a government fund compensating victims of forced labor under Germanyโs communist dictatorship, in a move campaigners hope will pressure other companies to follow.
Political as well as criminal prisoners in Germany during the Cold War era were forced to build flatpack furniture for IKEA. The revelations came to light in Swedish and German media reports more than a decade ago, prompting the company to commission an independent investigation.
Prisoners were producing furniture for IKEA, a global giant in the home furnishings industry, as recently as the 1970s and 1980s, the investigation conducted by auditors Ernst & Young found. IKEA representatives at the time were likely aware that political prisoners were being used to supplement labor, the report found.

The former East Germany was occupied by the Soviet Union from 1949 until 1990, which installed a rigid communist state known as the German Democratic Republic, or GDR. Tens of thousands of its prisoners were forced into factory work, making it a key location for cheap labor that many Western companies are understood to have benefitted from.
Many of the GDRโs political prisoners would have been incarcerated for the simple โcrimeโ of opposing the one-party communist state. Opposition to the state was stamped out by East Germanyโs feared Stasi secret police, which spied on almost every aspect of peopleโs daily lives.
In a statement this week, IKEA Germany announced it would voluntarily put 6 million euros towards the new government fund established to provide compensation to victims of the East German dictatorship.
After decades of campaigning by victim groups, Germanyโs ruling coalition government proposed in 2021 to set up the hardship fund. The German parliament will vote on its establishment in the coming weeks, although this step is seen as a mere formality.

The IKEA statement adds that the payment is the result of years-long conversations between the companyโs German branch and the Union of Victimsโ Associations of Communist Dictatorship (UOGK) โ an organization that describes itself as working to ensure those wrongly convicted in communist Germany receive justice in todayโs constitutional state.
In a statement provided to CNN, Walter Kadner, CEO and Chief Sustainability Officer at IKEA Germany, said: โWe deeply regret that products for IKEA were also produced by political prisoners in the GDR. Since it became known, IKEA has consistently worked to clarify the situation.
โWe have given our word to those affected that we will participate in providing support. We therefore welcome the implementation of the hardship fund and are pleased to be able to keep our promise.โ
IKEAโs landmark payment is the first of its kind. The move has been welcomed by organizations that advocate for victims.
Dieter Dombrowski, the chairman of UOGK, described the development as โgroundbreaking.โ
โAfter it became known that the company was involved in forced prison labor, IKEA accepted our invitation to talk. Together we have taken the path of enlightenment and IKEA has met those affected on an equal footing.โ
โWe hope that other companies will follow IKEAโs example,โ Dombrowski added.
According to UOGK, IKEA is one of many companies that benefitted from forced prison labor in communist Germany. Former UOKG chairman Rainer Wagner warned in 2012 that IKEA is โjust the tip of the icebergโ as he called for companies to compensate former prisoners who still bear the psychological scars of incarceration and forced labor.
Evelyn Zupke, special representative for GDR victims in the German parliament, said: โIKEAโs pledge to support the hardship fund is an expression of a responsible approach to dealing with dark chapters in the companyโs own history.
โWe canโt undo what prisoners had to suffer in the GDRโs prisons, but we can treat them with respect today and support them.โ
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