On the 10th anniversary from the collapse of the Rana Plaza building in Bangladesh, the President of the European Parliament Roberta Metsola said that the collapse was a wake-up call for the Western world.
Ten years ago, in Spring 2013, an eight-story commercial building called Rana Plaza in Bangladesh collapsed. Thousands of tons of metal and concrete came crashing down, killing 1,134 people.
Hundreds of lives. Garment workers. Factory workers. Mostly women, who only hours earlier had protested about the lack of safety of their working conditions, before being told to get back to work.
The Rana Plaza collapse in Bangladesh was a wake-up call for the Western world.
Ten years on, I would like to give the floor to a round of speakers to speak up about lessons learnt. And about what the European Union has done to own-up to the consequences of consumer preferences for abundance-and-affordability ahead of moderation-and-sustainability.
Because we have a responsibility here.