Daily Express

Danger products sold online as 2 in 3 fail safety tests

- By Steph Spyro

A HUGE number of products bought online from businesses such as Amazon and eBay are dangerous, experts say.

Which? joined with fellow consumer groups across Europe to test 250 products from online marketplac­es including Amazon, eBay, AliExpress and Wish – and said two-thirds failed EU safety requiremen­ts.

Faulty smoke alarms and USB chargers that could ignite have been found among a mass of dangerous products available through popular shopping websites.

Although online marketplac­es removed the dangerous items after being informed, some reappeared soon after.

Researcher­s say they found safety flaws in everything from toys and children’s clothing to jewellery and cosmetic products, which were being sold by thirdparty sellers.

All of the products selected for testing in the teeth-whitening, carbon monoxide alarm, balloon, smoke alarm and helmet categories were found to be unsafe.

Now Which? has called on the Government to make online marketplac­es legally responsibl­e for ensuring the safety of products sold on their sites.

Neena Bhati, head of campaigns at Which?, said: “Online marketplac­es have quickly become a popular way for people to shop online and yet Which? testing has repeatedly exposed how large numbers of dangerous products are sold on these sites every day.

“These platforms have failed to get a grip on this despite years of warnings, and so the Government must now step in to make online marketplac­es responsibl­e for ensuring the safety of the products sold on their sites.”

Amazon, AliExpress, eBay and Wish each responded, saying they take safety seriously on their platforms.

Leading retail giant Amazon said: “These are isolated incidents that do not reflect the fantastic products and customer experience provided by millions of small businesses selling in our store.”

Ebay said filters automatica­lly blocked up to five million products from entering the marketplac­e because of safety concerns between October 2018 and

October 2019. “We have no tolerance for unsafe, banned, recalled or illegal products on our marketplac­es, and it is required in our User Agreement that all sellers comply with the law,” the firm said. According to Which?, consumers are more vulnerable because they do not have the same protection­s as they do when buying from traditiona­l retail outlets. They said online marketplac­es need greater legal responsibi­lity, and over 70 per cent of users agreed. The UK had the third largest e-commerce market in the world in 2016. Recent UK government­al figures placed the value of UK e-commerce sales at £586billion in 2017. A spokesman for the Office for Product Safety and Standards said: “The Government’s top priority is to keep people safe, which is why the UK has some of the strictest product safety laws in the world. “We’ve written to all major online retailers asking them to explain the steps they are taking to ensure dangerous products are not for sale.”

 ??  ?? Smoke alarms were faulty
Smoke alarms were faulty

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