112 textile workers who were making clothes for Walmart died in a horrific 
factory fire in Bangladesh.   
Documents show that Walmart had blocked fire safety reforms that would have 
saved their lives.   
Now some of the survivors want to fly to the US to confront the Walmart 
executives who are responsible and make sure this never happens again. Lets 
make that possible! 
Can you chip in $3, or whatever you can afford, to help pay for their travel to 
Walmart's HQ?            
Romi, 
On November 24th, a fire ripped through the Tazreen clothing factory in 
Bangladesh, a supplier for Walmart and other western brands. Horrified workers 
trapped in the building discovered that the fire extinguishers didn’t work, and 
the factory doors were locked from the outside. As fire alarms sounded, 
managers ordered workers to return to their sewing machines, insisting that it 
was only a drill. By the time it was clear what was happening, many workers 
faced an impossible choice: leap from 8th floor windows or stay in the burning 
building and pray. Ultimately, 112 workers were burned alive. 
Local investigators have brought charges of “unpardonable negligence” against 
the factory owners. But there was another reason those workers were killed: 
Walmart, and its race-to-the-bottom policies. 
According to notes from an April 2011 meeting in Bangladesh, Walmart’s 
management was well aware of the dangerous conditions in its Bangladeshi 
suppliers. But the corporation refused to cooperate with efforts to make 
garment factories safer because, in the words of Walmart’s director of “ethical 
sourcing,” investments in building safety were “not financially feasible.” 
Walmart’s executives in Bentonville, Arkansas undoubtedly heard about the fire. 
They may even have shaken their head in dismay -- “what a tragedy,” they may 
have said. But then they got right back to work, fighting efforts by suppliers 
to be paid just a bit more, so the suppliers could make sure workers didn’t die 
making the clothes Walmart sells. They continue to see workers in their supply 
chain as raw numbers, and for Walmart, 112 lives aren’t worth paying the 
pennies per garment it would cost to save them. 
The sad truth is that until this issue is at their doorstep, Walmart executives 
will be able to continue to deflect blame. Sowe have a plan to get their 
attentiononce and for all: We want tobring some of the survivors of the Tazreen 
factory fire, as well as a Bangladeshi activist leading the charge for better 
working conditions, right to those executives’ doors. We want executives to 
hear what it was like to be in a building going up in flames and to find the 
emergency exits were locked. And above all, we want to remind Walmart’s bosses 
that they blocked reforms that could have prevented this tragedy -- and that 
they still have time to prevent the next one. 
Click here to donate $3, or whatever you can afford, to help us bring survivors 
of the Tazreen factory fire to Walmart executives’ front doors. 
Over 113,000 SumOfUs.org members have already called on Walmart to join the 
independently monitored Bangladeshi Fire and Building Safety Agreement in order 
to avoid future tragedies like the Tazreen fire. I delivered those signatures, 
along with 100,000 more from our partners at Credo Action, to a representative 
from Walmart’s corporate affairs at a rally in Washington, DC last month. But 
we’re going to have to be creative if we want to keep this issue in the media 
and on the minds of decision makers at Walmart. 
Imagine survivors of the Tazreen factory fire and family members of victims 
holding a canldelight vigil on CEO Rob Walton’s lawn, or traveling to New York 
during Fashion Week to talk to the press about the dark side of the garment 
industry, or meeting with the Walmart associates and warehouse workers who have 
been struggling to change Walmart from the other end of the supply chain. 
If we can bring over survivors of the deadly fire to confront Walmart directly, 
Walmart would continue to feel the heat from us -- and it would refocus the 
media on this life-and-death issue. Our partners at the International Labor 
Rights Forum work with laborers and labor activists in Bangladesh, and are 
excited to help arrange this delegation. They told us they can handle all the 
logistics for survivors who want to come to the U.S. and make their voices 
heard to Walmart directly. All they need is $20,000, which is where we come in. 
Can you contribute $3 to help make this Bangladeshi labor delegation to Walmart 
happen? 
Generous donations from the SumOfUs.org community have fueled amazing, 
courageous activism over the last year, from Julia Trigg Crawford’s lawsuit to 
stop the Keystone XL pipeline to the strikes at Walmart on Black Friday. Now we 
need to come together to make sure the world doesn’t forget the Tazreen fire 
and Walmart’s complicity. 
Thanks for all you do. 
Rob, Kaytee, and the team at SumOfUs.org    
 SumOfUs is a world-wide movement of people like you, working together to hold 
corporations accountable for their actions and forge a new, sustainable path 
for our global economy. You can follow us on Twitter, and like us on Facebook.  
 Was this email forwarded to you? Click here to add yourself to SumOfUs. 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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