NewsNew sanctions on Chinese cotton imports over Uyghur forced labour

New sanctions on Chinese cotton imports over Uyghur forced labour

The United States has banned imports from 26 Chinese companies (illustrative photo)
The United States has banned imports from 26 Chinese companies (illustrative photo)
Images source: © Getty Images | Elijah Nouvelage
Michał Krawiel

17 May 2024 17:09

The USA banned the import of cotton from 26 Chinese entities due to allegations of forced labour involving the Uyghur minority. The States aim to eliminate goods produced this way from the supply chain.

The United States banned imports from 26 Chinese companies trading or storing cotton as part of efforts to eliminate goods produced using forced labour involving Uyghur minorities from the American supply chain, CNN reports.

More companies added to the list

The companies were added to the Uyghur Forced Labour Prevention Act Entity List, which restricts the import of goods associated with what the US government has labelled as an ongoing genocide of the minority in China’s Xinjiang region.

American officials believe that Chinese authorities set up labour camps for Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities in the western Xinjiang region. Beijing denies any such abuses, CNN recalls.

Many of the listed cotton companies are headquartered outside Xinjiang but source cotton from this region, the US Department of Homeland Security said in a statement.

A spokesman for the Chinese embassy in Washington criticised this move.

65 companies on the DHS list

According to the department, Washington has restricted imports from 65 entities since the passage of the 2021 Uyghur Forced Labour Prevention Act.

Lawmakers want DHS to blacklist Chinese companies in the polysilicon, aluminium, PVC, and rayon industries, as well as any companies from other parts of Asia producing goods for the American market using raw materials sourced from Xinjiang, reads a report on CNN's website.

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