Skip to main content
URGENT: Gaza Crisis Appeal: Donate Now

Heartbreakers

STOP THE #HEARTBREAKERS.

Share this image so everyone knows, at a glance, which Aussie retailers are breaking hearts by refusing to sign the Bangladesh Fire and Safety Accord.



Stop the #heartbreakers.

In the past several years more than 1800 people have lost their lives making garments in Bangladesh.

As we all think about what to buy our mums this Mother’s Day, wouldn’t it be nice to know that the companies we shop from, which source from Bangladesh, aren’t breaking hearts by allowing unsafe and unhealthy work practices?

Since April 2013 Oxfam supporters have been asking Australian garment companies to sign the Bangladesh Fire and Safety Accord and thanks to your efforts seven of the Australian garment retailers we’ve targeted are now part of the Accord.

It is fantastic news that more Australian companies are now part of the Accord. This is a really important step forward.

Some companies that have not signed the Accord have their own audit and monitoring programs, but the Accord is still important to be able to independently verify companies’ own efforts inside factories. It gives workers the right to refuse dangerous work, mandates independent building inspections, workers’ health and safety training, and repairs and renovations to unsafe factories.

We’ve also spoken to a number of companies about the importance of transparency and publishing the location of their supplier factories. In the list above, you can see which companies have taken this next step.

As we continue to push for fair working conditions, we’ll also be raising the importance of paying wages that enable women to support their families in the long term and rights to collectively bargain – so stay tuned.

We encourage you to contact the companies who have not yet signed the Accord and ask them to sign on!

Sign the Petition

Women like Sumi make up the majority of textile workers around the world. Sumi narrowly escaped the Tazreen factory disaster in Dhaka in 2012 under conditions very similar to those at Rana Plaza.

Read her story

STOP THE #HEARTBREAKERS