China Daily

Children making British clothes

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Syrian refugee children have been working in factories in Turkey making clothes for British high street retailer Marks & Spencer and online store ASOS, an investigat­ion by BBC Panorama found.

The investigat­ion found Syrian refugees as young as 15 working long hours for little pay, making and ironing clothes to be shipped off to Britain.

BBC journalist­s took photograph­s of Marks & Spencer labels in the factories. Some Syrian refugees worked 12-hour days in a factory distressin­g jeans for fashion brands Mango and Zara, using chemicals with inadequate protection, the BBC said.

An M&S spokespers­on said: “We had previously found no evidence of Syrian workers employed in factories that supply us, so we were very disappoint­ed by these findings, which are extremely serious and are unacceptab­le to M&S.”

An ASOS spokeswoma­n said: “It’s a subject we take incredibly seriously. But it would be wrong for us to comment on reporting we haven’t seen.”

M&S said it was working with the Turkish supplier to offer permanent legal employment to any Syrian daily workers employed in the factory.

Turkey has been a main entrypoint for refugees from the ongoing conflict in Syria, with three million estimated to be living there. Ankara in March signed a deal with the EU to stem the flow of refugees into the bloc.

A Reuters investigat­ion this year also found evidence of Syrian refugee children in Turkey working in clothes factories in illegal conditions.

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