‘Skin just falling off’: Temu jumper recalled after girl horrifically burnt

Posted by
Check your BMI

An eight-year-old Queensland girl was horrifically burnt and has been left facing up to 10 years of surgery after her jumper caught fire while she was standing near a fire pit outside her home.

The product was bought off popular website Temu.

It was recalled after being found in breach of Australian Safety Standards in November.

READ MORE: Senator's husband refuses to shake Kamala Harris' hand

'Skin just falling off her': Girl left with burns after Temu jumper ignited An eight-year-old girl has been left with horrific burns after her jumper ignited while she was standing near a fire pit outside her home.

toonsbymoonlight

Daniella Jacobs-Herd, from Hervey Bay, received the glow in the dark, purple unicorn, hoodie for her birthday from her grandmother.

She wore it religiously – until it caught alight.

A spark from a backyard firepit landed on the fabric and ignited it in a split second on July 13, 2024.

"You might as well just throw an accelerant on her and let her on fire. That's how it looked," mother Hannah Jacobs, said.

'Skin just falling off her': Girl left with burns after Temu jumper ignited An eight-year-old girl has been left with horrific burns after her jumper ignited while she was standing near a fire pit outside her home.

READ MORE: Brother accused of shooting dead woman was reacting to a threat, lawyers says

'Skin just falling off her': Girl left with burns after Temu jumper ignited An eight-year-old girl has been left with horrific burns after her jumper ignited while she was standing near a fire pit outside her home.

"It was just melting. She was screaming.

"You can see that the product itself actually melted like plastic, like a plastic bag.

"Everyone, all the adults, were in quite distress because they had seen her skin just falling off her."

Daniella suffered burns to 13 per cent of her body.

Doctors say she is facing up to 10 years of surgery.

The incident forced the hoodies to be pulled from shelves, but not until four months later.

READ MORE: Pregnant teacher plunges to her death after horror fall in Greece

Temu recall

READ MORE: Biggest funnel web spider ever handed into reptile park revealed

The Australian Competition & Consumer Commission (ACCC) found they weren't up to Australian standards and didn't have a fire warning label.

"How can this be in Australia How can we have these products that burn children," Jacobs-Herd said.

The family have now engaged lawyers to reach a resolution with Temu.

"I don't want money for personal gain, I just want my daughter to have some sort of a life," she said.

READ MORE: Warning after mosquitoes found carrying deadly virus

Temu said they were assisting in communications with the family and were working with the ACCC to address the matter.

Product Safety Australia said in its recall notice the jumpers don't include the required warning label to meet the mandatory standard for children's nightwear.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments