100’s of brands have been linked to Uyghur forced labour.

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Graphic asking Did you know? 1 in 5 cotton garments in the global fashion industry are tainted by Uyghur forced labour.

There are over 1 million Uyghurs and other Turkic and Muslim-majority peoples rounded up in detention and forced labour camps in the Uyghur Region. This is the largest internment of an ethnic and religious group since World War II.

Yet major corporations continue to profit from the Chinese government’s state-sponsored system of forced labour.

The only way for these companies to ensure that they are not profiting from Uyghur forced labour is by cutting all ties with the region and companies that are benefiting from these crimes against humanity.

Tell companies to meet civil society’s demands now!

Screenshot of HRF Uyghur forced labor tracker on the North Face website

Uyghur Forced Labour Checker

Stay informed while shopping online. Human Rights Foundation has launched a new plug-in for your browser to tell you which brands may be complicit in using Uyghur forced labor. Install the Chrome extension plug-in today!

Uyghur Forced Labour Database

Most people don’t know if their clothes, solar panels, tech, cars, appliances, and food are linked to forced labour. Check out Jewish World Watch’s tool to find documented evidence of a company’s ties to Uyghur forced labour.

Making the Grade

We’re releasing report cards on brands to see if they pass on ending their complicity in Uyghur forced labour.

See our first reports on our Resources section.

Follow us on Twitter and Instagram to get the latest updates for our campaigns.

Projection on Zara store in Hong Kong stating Zap Zara! Say no to forced labour fashion.

Photo of a guerrilla projection staged by activists in Hong Kong on April 15, 2021.

“As young consumers, we need to question our own roles in the fashion industry’s normalization of exploiting and abusing marginalized groups for commercial means. While we are not directly contributing to human rights abuses, we continue to support the very system that capitalizes on the injustices faced by the Uyghurs through our own consumption.”

Tasnim Benalla & Danial Khan, Free Uyghur Now

Photos by Brian Lundquist on Unsplash and Hong Kong activists on Twitter.
Graphics by Forced Labour Fashion, Human Rights Foundation, and Jewish World Watch