US bans new types of goods from China over allegations of forced labor
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[October 03, 2024] By
DIDI TANG
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Department of Homeland Security announced
Wednesday that it would ban the import of goods from a Chinese steel
manufacturer and a Chinese maker of artificial sweetener, accusing both
of being involved in the use of forced labor from China's far-west
region of Xinjiang.
The action broadens the scope of the U.S. effort to counter products
from entering the country that the government says are tied to human
rights abuses.
The additions to the entity list under the Uyghur Forced Labor
Prevention Act marks the first time a China-based steel company or
aspartame sweetener business have been targeted by U.S. law enforcement,
DHS said.
“Today’s actions reaffirm our commitment to eliminating forced labor
from U.S. supply chains and upholding our values of human rights for
all,” said Robert Silvers, undersecretary of Homeland Security for
policy. “No sector is off-limits. We will continue to identify entities
across industries and hold accountable those who seek to profit from
exploitation and abuse.”
The federal law that President Joe Biden signed at the end of 2021
followed allegations of human rights abuses by Beijing against members
of the ethnic Uyghur group and other Muslim minorities in Xinjiang. The
Chinese government has refuted the claims as lies and defended its
practice and policy in Xinjiang as fighting terror and ensuring
stability.
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The Department of Homeland Security logo is seen during a news
conference in Washington, Feb. 25, 2015. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez
Monsivais, File)
The new approach marked a shift in
the U.S. trade relationship with China to increasingly take into
account national security and human rights. Beijing has accused the
U.S. of using human rights as a pretext to suppress China’s economic
growth.
Enforcement of the law initially targeted solar products, tomatoes,
cotton and apparel, but over the last several months, the U.S.
government has identified new sectors for enforcement, including
aluminum and seafood.
“That’s just a reflection of the fact that sadly, forced labor
continues to taint all too many supply chains,” Silvers told a trade
group in June when marking the two-year anniversary of the creation
of the entity list. “So our enforcement net has actually been quite
wide from an industry-sector perspective.”
He said the law “changed the dynamic in terms of putting the onus on
importers to know their own supply chains" and that its enforcement
had showed that the U.S. could “do the right thing” without halting
normal trade.
Since June 2022, the entity list has grown to a total of 75
companies accused of using forced labor in Xinjiang or sourcing
materials tied to that forced labor, Homeland Security said.
Baowu Group Xinjiang Bayi Iron and Steel Co. Ltd and Changzhou
Guanghui Food Ingredients Co. Ltd. were the Chinese companies newly
added to the list.
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