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Detecting slave-made goods from China is growing harder, U.S. says

by Christine Murray | @chrissiemurray | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Friday, 16 October 2020 18:25 GMT

Locals and Chinese security personnel cross a junction in the centre of Urumqi in China's Xinjiang Autonomous Region September 7, 2009. China's troubled far-western city of Urumqi has spelt out potential punishments for spreading rumours after days of sometimes deadly unrest and panic about reported syringe attacks that fanned ethnic tensions. REUTERS/Nir Elias

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Forced labor by the Chinese government had spread beyond Xinjiang, the U.S. government says

(Adds comment from Chinese Embassy paragraphs 10, 11

By Christine Murray

Oct 16 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Major brands face a growing challenge to root out forced labor in Chinese supply chains, the top U.S. anti-human trafficking official said Friday, as the United States stepped up the blocking of imports of goods made in Xinjiang.

Ambassador-at-Large John Richmond said reports that forced labor by the Chinese government had spread beyond Xinjiang to other provinces complicated the process of due diligence for global firms.

"It is increasingly difficult for well-intentioned international companies to track exactly which products in their supply chain are made with forced labor," Richmond told a Zoom call with journalists.

He added that the United States would continue its efforts to connect companies with activists and nonprofits to help call attention to abuses.

"U.S. companies do not want to unwittingly support forced labor and neither do U.S. consumers," Richmond said.

The Xinjiang region in northwest China is home to a large population of Uighur people, a Muslim minority that has faced mass detention in Chinese government camps.

An Australian think tank earlier this year found that tens of thousands of Uighurs were moved to work in factories in other parts of China.

Another program in rural Tibet, where workers are being transferred into military-style training centers, was reported by Reuters in September and defended by officials in Chinese-administered Tibet this week.

China's government has denied mistreatment of the Uighurs and the presence of forced labor in Tibet. 

A representative for the Chinese Embassy in the United States said all workers in Xinjiang entered into contracts with employers and that the issue of forced labor there was a rumor created by anti-China media.

"Such a rumor has not a shred of fact in it," the Chinese representative said via email.

The U.S. government's criticism of China comes at a time of bilateral trade tensions between the two countries.

Separately on Thursday, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) said it had detained the import of 32 cartons of women's leather gloves from Xinjiang on the suspicion they were made with forced labor.

CBP has issued 13 orders to block goods it suspected were made with forced labor in fiscal year 2020, including eight on goods from China.

Some activists have asked for a broader detention order on goods from Xinjiang, but Richmond declined to say whether he was in favor of it.

"We obviously want to consider the merits of that, but what we want to do as the United States is send a clear message that products that are made with forced labor are not going to be allowed to come into the United States," he said.

A committee of lawmakers in Britain on Friday wrote to several leading brands to ask about their sourcing and whether they were profiting from the forced labor of Uighurs in Xinjiang.

RELATED LINKS

U.S. puts China at top of forced labor list

Shipment of Chinese hair goods seized by U.S. officials suspecting forced labor

U.S. criticized over top anti-trafficking ranking despite failings

   

(Reporting by Christine Murray; Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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