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UK urged to stop cotton imports made in Chinese “prison camps”

London, UK
Thomson Reuters Foundation

Major brands are turning a blind eye to forced labour on a scale not seen since World War II, lawyers and campaigners said on Thursday as they urged Britain to halt imports of cotton goods originating from China’s Xinjiang region.

They named H&M, IKEA, Uniqlo and Muji among companies selling merchandise made with cotton from Xinjiang where the United Nations estimates at least a million ethnic Uighurs and other Muslims have been detained in massive camps.

Cotton farming China

A farmer picks cotton from a field in Hami, Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, China, on 1st November, 2012. PICTURE: Reuters/China Daily/File photo

H&M and IKEA said the organisation through which their suppliers source cotton had recently announced it would no longer be approving cotton from Xinjiang.

Uniqlo and Muji, which has touted the Xinjiang origin of its cotton as a selling point on its website, did not respond to requests for comment. 

In a letter to the British government, the World Uyghur Congress and the Global Legal Action Network said there was “overwhelming evidence” that Uighurs were being used for forced labour in China’s cotton industry.

They urged Britain to carry out an investigation and suspend imports made with cotton from the region unless companies could prove they were not produced with forced labour. Customs should also consider seizing imports already in the country, they said.

“These supply chains and the import of this cotton must be halted,” said Gearoid O Cuinn, director of GLAN, a network of lawyers, academics and investigative journalists. 

“Its production is reliant on the largest systematic incarceration of an ethnic group since the Holocaust,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

China, which says the camps are designed to stamp out terrorism and provide vocational skills, has denied using Uighurs for forced labour. The Chinese embassy in London did not immediately respond to the allegations in the letter. 

More than 80 per cent of China’s cotton comes from Xinjiang, a large region in the northwest, which is home to about eleven million Uighurs. 

In its letter to Britain’s customs authority (HMRC), GLAN and the Uighur rights group said imports of cotton sourced in Xinjiang violated British laws, including legislation prohibiting the importation of prison-made goods.  

They outlined evidence they said demonstrated China’s widespread use of forced labour by Uighurs in its cotton industry – both in processing raw cotton and in turning it into clothing and other goods. 

H&M said it prohibited forced labour in its supply chain, and had never worked with garment factories in Xinjiang.

It said it sourced all of its cotton from China through the Better Cotton Initiative, a global non-profit committed to improving working conditions in the sector.

The BCI said in March it would no longer license so-called Better Cotton from Xinjiang for the 2020-21 cotton season and had contracted an outside expert to review the situation.

IKEA said it supported the BCI review. “Under no circumstances do we accept any form of forced labour in the IKEA supply chain,” a spokesman added. 

Britain has been hailed as a leader in the global drive to end modern-day slavery, and has joined other countries in urging China to halt the mass detentions.

GLAN said it would consider legal action if the government did not act.

In the United States, lawmakers have proposed legislation aimed at preventing the importation of goods made using forced labour in Xinjiang.

 

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