The
EU executive does not name any country in its proposal, but it
follows a European Parliament call for such a law in June that
highlighted concerns over human rights in China's Xinjiang
region.
Rights groups accuse Beijing of abuses against Uyghurs, a mainly
Muslim ethnic minority, in Xinjiang, including mass forced
labour in internment camps. The United States, which accuses
China of genocide, introduced a law in 2021 that broadly
prohibits importing goods from Xinjiang.
China denies abuses in the region, a major cotton producer that
also supplies materials for solar panels.
The EU proposal highlights the 27.6 million people the
International Labour Organization says were engaged in forced
labour in 2021, 11% more than in 2016.
Just over half were in the Asia-Pacific region, although the
highest level per capita was in Arab states. Forced labour was
also a problem in high income countries.
The European Commission is proposing national agencies in the
27-member EU should establish if forced labour has been used to
make a product. The Commission would publish decisions on a
website to guide customs authorities.
The ban should apply to all products, including components, and
to all levels of production from extraction or harvest to
manufacturing as well as to EU-made products and EU exports.
The new law might not lead to major changes in trade flows, but
would increase pressure on companies to monitor supply chains.
Greens EU lawmaker Anna Cavazzini welcomed the broad proposal,
but expressed concern products would only be blocked at the end
of an investigation and said the burden of proof was not on
companies after allegations of forced labour, as it is in the
United States.
The European Parliament and EU governments will almost certainly
modify the proposal and will need to agree before it enters
force.
(Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop; Editing by Mark Potter)
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