Levi’s has built a clothing empire off the backs of garment workers in Bangladesh and Pakistan - but the company won’t sign an agreement to keep workers safe.

Tell Levi’s: protect garment workers, not your bottom line!

 Sign the petition 

John,

Ten years ago, more than 1000 garment workers in Bangladesh were killed in the Rana Plaza disaster. Over 190 companies, from H&M to Zara, scrambled to sign a safety accord.

One company that refused to sign? Levi's.

10 years later and the world's most famous denim brand continues to maximize profit by failing to guarantee basic health and safety rights for its workers.

But the anniversary gives us a chance to change that, as global media starts to examine brands' track record since the disaster. Let's do everything we can to put the spotlight on Levi's -- click below to sign, then share everywhere!

Levi's: treat your workers like people.

Levi’s says it supports the spirit of this safety accord but its own audits and checks are better. But it’s questionable whether Levi’s is making its factories safe for workers. Last year, one of the workers at a factory supplying Levi’s alleged that workers don’t have access to clean or cold water and often faint from the heat.

Levi’s sources from more than 60 factories in Bangladesh and Pakistan. By signing the Accord Levi’s would have to allow independent safety inspectors into those factories as well as guaranteeing basic health and safety provisions for workers.

If the International Accord is good enough for big name brands like H&M, Zara and Calvin Klein, why isn’t it good enough for Levi’s?

Levi’s is not alone in putting its profits above the lives of garment workers in Bangladesh and Pakistan. They are one of a dozen brands that fail to prioritize workers’ lives since the Rana Plaza collapse, including: Amazon, ASDA, Columbia Sportswear, Decathlon, IKEA, JC Penney, Kontoor Brands, Target, Tom Tailor, URBN and Walmart.

In the aftermath of the horrifying Rana Plaza disaster, the Ekō community pressured massive fashion brands like H&M and Zara to back this new safety accord. Now we need to do it again, but it's going to take all of us. Let's push Levi’s to do the right thing.

Levi’s, IKEA, Amazon and others: Protect workers in Bangladesh and Pakistan, not your bottom line!

 Sign the petition 

Thanks for all that you do,
Vicky and the team at Ekō


More information:

Bangladesh Apparel Industry Looks Inward As 10th Anniversary Of Rana Plaza Tragedy Nears
Forbes. 1st November 2022

 
 

 

 


Ekō is a community of people from around the world committed to curbing the growing power of corporations. We want to buy from, work for and invest in companies that respect the environment, treat their workers well and respect democracy. And we’re not afraid to stand up to them when they don’t.

Please help keep Ekō strong by chipping in $3

This email was sent to [email protected]. | Unsubscribe