Products Made by Uyghurs | US bans imports

(Washington) The US Senate on Thursday unanimously approved a law banning the importation into the United States of a wide range of products made in China’s Xinjiang province in a bid to combat forced labor by the Uyghur minority .



The adoption of the text is a victory for the supporters of an aggressive policy aimed at combating the violation of human rights. The vote came despite a lobbying campaign from companies arguing that the legislation would disrupt global supply chains, already under pressure from the pandemic.

The text is now on President Joe Biden’s desk for signature.

This is the first time that a country has taken such a step.

The text provides for the banning of products made in whole or in part in Xinjiang, unless companies are able to prove to customs officials that the products were not made with forced labor.

“Many companies have already taken steps to clean up their supply chains,” said Marco Rubio, Republican senator from Florida and one of the authors of the bill.

He stressed that action had to be taken to stop making Americans “unwitting accomplices in the atrocities, in the genocide committed by the Chinese Communist Party”.

Beijing is accused by Western countries of massively locking the Uyghurs, a predominantly Muslim and Turkic-speaking community in western China, in large labor camps.

The announcement comes as the Commerce Department and the Treasury announced new sanctions against Chinese biotech and high-tech companies accused of using their technology to serve the government to amplify Uyghur surveillance.

“We agree with Congress that measures can and should be taken to hold the People’s Republic of China accountable for genocide and human rights violations and to combat forced labor in Xinjiang,” the Chinese press said on Tuesday. White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki, at the time of the announcement of a deal on the text.

“The (Biden) administration will work closely with Congress to implement this bill to ensure that global supply chains are free from forced labor,” she added in a statement.


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