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Monday, April 15, 2024

US Congress to ban Chinese products made by enslaved Muslims

US has repeatedly accused China of suppressing Muslims in the province of Xinjiang. Now US Congress is considering banning imports of products from Xinjiang allegedly made by enslaved Muslim workers. However, China describes Xinjiang camps as vocational training sites and says it is trying to reduce the Islamic extremism among Muslims of Xinjiang. This marks yet another low in US-China tensions.

US lawmakers on Wednesday proposed a ban on most imports from China’s Xinjiang region, charging that goods produced by Uighur forced laborers were making their way into the United States.

The United States already bans products made through slavery but with China holding more than one million Uighurs and other Muslims in camps in Xinjiang, lawmakers said that forced labor was interwoven into the region’s economy.

“These practices in Xinjiang are one of the world’s largest human tragedies. It remains unimaginable, frankly, that this is happening in 2020,” Senator Marco Rubio, a Republican sponsor of the bipartisan bill, told reporters.

Representative Jim McGovern, a Democrat who leads the Congressional-Executive Committee on China, which looks at human rights, said that witnesses, surveillance photos and leaked documents all showed the existence of forced labor.

“We know that many US, international and Chinese companies are complicit in the exploitation of forced labor involving Uighurs and other Muslim minorities,” McGovern said.

“Audits of supply chains are simply not possible because forced labor is so pervasive within the regional economy,” he said.

The act would ban import of any goods from Xinjiang unless US Customs and Border Protection has “clear and convincing evidence” that no forced labor was involved.

Read more: Corporate hand in Uighur muslims oppression

In an accompanying report, the committee said it had seen “credible reports” that goods involving forced labor have come into the United States, including textiles, cell phones, computer hardware, shoes and tea.

It listed a number of companies that allegedly benefited from forced labor, including shoemakers Adidas and Nike, fashion brands Calvin Klein and H&M, beverage giant Coca-Cola and Campbell Soup.

The Uighur Forced Labor Prevention Act, if approved by Congress, would also require the secretary of state to produce a report on whether coerced labor is taking place and outline steps to combat it.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo criticized China’s treatment of minorities Wednesday as he released the State Department’s annual report on human rights.

“As I’ve said before, the CCP’s record in Xinjiang is the stain of the century,” Pompeo said, referring to the Chinese Communist Party.

The global report noted reports by the media and non-government organizations of forced labor in Xinjiang.

Uighur activists say that China is conducting a massive brainwashing campaign aimed at eradicating their separate culture and practice of Islam.

Read more: China’s Running More Uighur Camps & Prisons Than Known

China describes the camps as vocational training sites and says it is trying to reduce the allure of Islamic extremism.

AFP with inputs from GVS News Desk