Exclusive: Walmart arm did not deliberately remove Xinjiang goods, China
exec tells analysts
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[January 05, 2022] BEIJING
(Reuters) - Walmart Inc arm Sam's Club, responding to the furore in
China over what local media said was its deliberate removal of
Xinjiang-sourced products from its app, denied the move in a call with
analysts and termed it "a misunderstanding".
Chinese social media users and local news outlets criticised Sam's Club,
a members only warehouse club that offers products and services, last
week for the removal of the products from its domestic online stores.
China's anti-graft agency accused the U.S. retailer and Sam's Club of
"stupidity and short-sightedness" over the matter.
A Sam's Club representative told local analysts in a call organised by a
domestic securities firm last week that Chinese consumers failed to find
products from Xinjiang because the app does not support searches for
products based on names of places.
The call, a full recording of which was shared with Reuters by a
participant, introduced the representative as Sam's Club regional
e-commerce leader surnamed Zhang.
"This matter is a misunderstanding," Zhang said on the call.
"We didn't defend ourselves, because, there is no reason to be afraid of
things we haven't done," Zhang added. A second participant corroborated
Zhang's comments made on the call, which also talked about Sam's Club's
plans in China.
Walmart did not respond to a request for comment. Neither Walmart nor
Sam's Club has commented publicly so far on the backlash against them in
China and Zhang did not comment on the situation at Walmart, which was
also accused of removing products from the far western Chinese region,
from both its offline stores and app.
The controversy, which prompted a wave of Sam's Club shoppers in China
to cancel their memberships, underscores the tightrope foreign companies
walk in China as they balance geopolitical tensions between China and
the west with China's importance as a market and supply base.
Xinjiang has become a growing point of conflict between Western
governments and China, as U.N. experts and rights groups estimate more
than a million people, mainly Uyghurs and members of other Muslim
minorities, have been detained in camps there.
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A customer checks the beef steaks at a Sam's Club store of Wal-Mart
in Beijing, China June 29, 2017. REUTERS/Jason Lee
China has rejected accusations of forced labour or any other abuses in Xinjiang,
describing the camps as vocational centres designed to combat extremism, and in
late 2019 said all people in the camps had "graduated".
MEMBERSHIPS CANCELLED
Besides Walmart, Swedish fashion retailer H&M and U.S. chipmaker Intel have come
under fire in China in recent months for making adjustments to their businesses
over Xinjiang. In contrast, Tesla was criticised by U.S. rights groups for
opening a showroom in Xinjiang on Dec. 31.
Chinese social media users turned against Sam's Club shortly after U.S.
President Joe Biden signed legislation on Dec. 23 banning imports from Xinjiang
over concerns about forced labour.
Zhang said that Sam's Club, which has 4.4 million members in China, saw around
500 shoppers cancel their membership cards in its central region. He did not
give a nationwide number.
"It has negative impact on our membership base, but time will prove everything
in the future," he said.
"We think the potential in China is very big."
China is a huge market for Walmart, generating revenue of $11.43 billion during
the company's fiscal year that ended Jan. 31. Of 423 retail units Walmart
operates in China, 36 are Sam's Club stores, according to its website.
(Reporting by Beijing Newsroom; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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