Swedish furniture giant IKEA on Tuesday said it was recalling more than 35 million chests and dressers in North America after six children died in the US when they tipped over.
The recall by the company — the world’s largest furniture seller — affects 29 million units sold in the US and 6.6 million units sold in Canada, according to IKEA and safety regulators in the two countries.
The recalled items are “unstable if they are not properly anchored to the wall, posing a tip-over and entrapment hazard that can result in death or injuries to children,” IKEA North America said in a statement.
Photo: AFP
“If you have, or think you have, one of these drawers... please act immediately,” US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) chairman Elliot Kaye said. “We’re imploring you.”
Speaking at a news conference in Washington, Kaye illustrated the tip-over danger by having personnel from his office use a 13kg dummy dressed as a young girl hang from the top drawers of MALM furniture.
The empty bureau tumbled down on the dummy in repeated demonstrations.
Eight million of the recalled items in the US are MALM model chests and dressers, and 21 million additional children’s and adult chests and dressers. All were manufactured between 2002 and June.
In Canada, where no fatal incidents have occurred, the authorities recalled dozens of models sold since 1993.
Customers in both countries can get full refunds, pick up wall-anchoring kits at nearby stores or have IKEA personnel come to attach wall anchors at no charge, the company said.
Owners were urged to immediately discontinue use of the affected products if not anchored to walls, and to move them to rooms not accessible by children.
Victims in the US include a two-year-old boy killed when a six-drawer chest tipped over on him in February 2014, a 23-month-old boy who died when he was trapped under a three-drawer chest in June 2014, and a 22-month-old boy crushed to death by a six-drawer chest in February, the CPSC said.
In the three fatal incidents involving MALM furniture — made of particleboard or fiberboard — none of the items were anchored to a wall, the CPSC said.
Seventeen other people were injured in similar incidents.
IKEA also reported 41 incidents of tip-overs involving non-MALM furniture in the US, resulting in deaths in 1989, 2002 and 2007.
Nineteen more children were injured, the CPSC said.
At the company’s headquarters in Stockholm, IKEA group spokeswoman Kajsa Johansson told reporters that the drawers “meet all mandatory stability requirements on all markets where sold,” adding that the bureaus were “safe when anchored to the wall” as they are instructed to be.
IKEA has sold more than 147 million chests of drawers over the past 13 years, just over half of them — 78 million — of the MALM brand, the company said.
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