China: US shut down on imports linked to forced labor by Uyghurs

China: US shut down on imports linked to forced labor by Uyghurs


 Joe Biden on Thursday (December 23rd) signed a law banning the importation into the United States of a wide range of products made in China's Xinjiang province in an attempt to combat forced labor by the Uyghur minority. The American president warned American companies tempted to give in to Beijing.

 China: US shut down on imports linked to forced labor by Uyghurs

 The Facts Joe Biden on Thursday (December 23rd) signed a law banning the importation into the United States of a wide variety of products made in China's Xinjiang province in an attempt to combat forced labor by the Uyghur minority. The American president warned American companies tempted to give in to Beijing.

 Is this the end of imports of cotton and tomatoes from Xinjiang to the United States? Joe Biden on Thursday, December 23, signed a law banning the purchase of products believed to be the result of forced labor by Uyghurs in China, and the White House has already warned American companies that they would be tempted to bow to Beijing.

 The text signed by the American president provides for the banning of products manufactured in whole or in part in this Chinese province, unless companies are able to provide proof that the products were not made with forced labor , a world first.

 The law requires that special attention be paid to imports of three products: cotton, of which Xinjiang is one of the world's major producers; tomatoes, also mass produced in the region; and polysilicon, a material used in the production of photovoltaic panels.

 Joe Biden on Thursday (December 23rd) signed a law banning the importation into the United States of a wide range of products made in China's Xinjiang province in an attempt to combat forced labor by the Uyghur minority. The American president warned American companies tempted to give in to Beijing.

 Is this the end of imports of cotton and tomatoes from Xinjiang to the United States? Joe Biden on Thursday, December 23, signed a law banning the purchase of products believed to be the result of forced labor by Uyghurs in China, and the White House has already warned American companies that they would be tempted to bow to Beijing.

 The text signed by the American president provides for the banning of products manufactured in whole or in part in this Chinese province, unless companies are able to provide proof that the products were not made with forced labor , a world first.

 The law requires that special attention be paid to imports of three products: cotton, of which Xinjiang is one of the world's major producers; tomatoes, also mass produced in the region; and polysilicon, a material used in the production of photovoltaic panels.

 This law gives the government "new tools to prevent the entry into the territory of products made with forced labor in Xinjiang and to hold accountable the people and entities behind these abuses," Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in Thursday. a statement calling on the Chinese government to end "genocide and crimes against humanity".

 A text supported by Democrats and Republicans

 Beijing blasted this text on Friday, accusing the United States of "violating international law" and "slandering" China. In a statement, the Chinese foreign ministry urged Washington to "immediately correct its mistakes", otherwise threatening retaliation.

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