British corporations’ Syrian refugee child labour in Turkey


This 6 August 2015 video is called Child labor spreads among Syrian refugees in Turkey عمالة الأطفال تعكس مأساة السوريين

From daily The Independent in Britain today:

Syrian refugee children found working in Next and H&M factories

Next and H&M says refugees in Turkey were working in their supply-chain factories

Laura Pitel, Istanbul

3 hours ago

Two of Britain’s high street giants have found Syrian refugee children working in their clothing factories in Turkey, leading to calls for other retailers to investigate their own supply chains.

H&M and Next were the only retailers that admitted to identifying child labour in supplier factories in Turkey, but there are fears that the phenomenon could be far more widespread after several other companies failed to answer questions on the use of Syrian workers in their factories.

Along with China, Cambodia and Bangladesh, Turkey is one of the largest producers of clothing sold on the British high street, supplying labels that include Topshop, Burberry, Marks & Spencer and Asos.

The country is also the world’s largest host of Syrian refugees, accepting more than 2.5 million people who have fled the conflict since 2011.

A report by the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre (BHRRC), a non-profit organisation that monitors company ethics, warns that few brands are taking adequate steps to ensure that vulnerable refugees are not “fleeing from conflict into exploitative working conditions”.

Though Ankara has won praise for its “open door” policy towards Syrian refugees, it was not until this month that it announced that they would be given the right to work after striking a deal with the EU as part of an effort to reduce the numbers flocking to Europe.

Hundreds of thousands of Syrian adults in Turkey work for low pay far below the minimum wage of 1,300 Turkish lira (£309) per month. Many children are employed as cheap labour on farms and factories in breach of Turkish and international laws that forbid those under 12 from working. Children aged 13-14 are banned from all but light work.

In an effort to gauge the scale of the problem, the BHRRC asked 28 major brands last month about their Turkish suppliers and their strategies for combating the exploitation of Syrian children and adults.

H&M and Next were the only ones which revealed that they had identified child labour over the course of 2015. Both companies said that they had taken action to return the children to education and support their families. They did not specify their ages. …

The BHRRC said that it was alarmed by the responses, warning: “Only a few brands appear to have engaged with the extent and the complexity of these issues in their Turkish supply base; even fewer report taking action to protect these vulnerable workers.” It said that many companies appeared to have an “out of sight, out of mind” approach to auditing their factories, conducting preannounced visits that could allow factory managers to cover up abuses.

Phil Bloomer, executive director of the BHRRC, said that H&M and Next deserved praise for their honesty and urged other companies to take the problem seriously. He said: “No brands want child labour in their supply chain, but what matters is how vigorous they are in looking for it and what they do when they find it. Given reports from the ground indicate refugee child labour is common in Turkey, it is positive that two brands in our report identified this problem and took action to protect the children. We need all brands to show equal vigour in eliminating this curse.”

Turkey closes its borders as thousands of refugees flee: here.

Syrian refugee children have been making clothes for British shoppers, an undercover BBC investigation has found. Panorama investigated factories in Turkey and found children had been working on clothes for Marks and Spencer and the online retailer Asos. Adult refugees were also found working illegally on Zara and Mango jeans: here.

See also here.

16 thoughts on “British corporations’ Syrian refugee child labour in Turkey

  1. Although it’s good that Next and H&M have taken steps to get these children back into school, these jobs are often the only means of support their families have. To stop them having to send their kids into this exploitation, refugee families need proper support.

    Like

    • Indeed, they need proper support. And, if they want, the possibility to travel on to countries other than Turkey, as Turkey is not a safe country, with its goverrnment’s violence against Kurds and leftists. I do hope the Next and H&M refugee children are really at school now; as most Syrian refugee children in Turkey don’t have the right to go to school.

      Like

  2. Pingback: British government deports child refugees to war zones | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  3. Pingback: Black British solidarity with Calais refugees | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  4. Pingback: ‘Stop European Union-Turkey anti-refugee deal’ | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  5. Pingback: ‘Turkey is not safe’, United States government says | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  6. Pingback: Religious fundamentalist child labour Dutch scandal | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  7. Pingback: Syrian student hit by Trump’s travel ban | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  8. Pingback: Millions of child labourers and slaves | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  9. Pingback: Child labour in Turkey | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  10. Pingback: Jordanian prime minister gone, absolute monarchy still there | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  11. Pingback: Burberry burning its own fashion for profit | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  12. Pingback: Trump, Erdogan, deportations to, war in, Syria | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  13. Pingback: Turkish regime deports refugees to Syrian war | Dear Kitty. Some blog

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.