World

The forced labour filling our closets: U.S. is coming after it in an unprecedented way

A new U.S. law takes effect this month targeting items made with forced labour, notably in China's Xinjiang region. Critics of the measure warn it will cause economic chaos. And possibly test our consumption habits.

Penalties against goods made with forced labour take effect June 21. Businesses warn it will cause chaos

The Chinese region of Xinjiang produces 20 per cent of the world's cotton. It's also rife with re-education camps and forced labour for Muslim Uyghurs, making it the target of a new U.S. law set to take effect this month. (Reuters)

Here's an uncomfortable thought experiment for the next time you're standing before your wardrobe, running your fingertips through your garments.

Count five items containing cotton. Stop at the fifth garment. Now imagine an enslaved human being. Because by this point, you're statistically likely to own their work.

Rayhan Asat thinks about this constantly. She's a U.S.-based lawyer who comes from an oppressed minority region of China where forced labour is systemic and which produces one-fifth of the world's cotton.

Asat hasn't seen her brother in six years. And when she looks at clothing, she remembers people like him in forced detention and wonders if it was spawned from their suffering.

"I often think about it," said Asat, a fellow at Yale Law and the Atlantic Council in Washington, D.C.

"Every time I'm mindful: Is this made in China? Does it mean it's tainted with forced labour? Is it one of my family members?"

Soon, we'll all be confronted more directly with this reality, courtesy of U.S. lawmakers. Our clothing and our conscience are on a collision course this month.

There's a mounting pile of detailed evidence of human rights abuses against ethnic Uyghurs in China's Muslim region of Xinjiang, a hub for cotton, tomato paste and solar-panel production.

And there's a specific date when things are supposed to change: June 21.

That's the day a new U.S. law takes effect, aimed at reordering international supply chains by altering the behaviour of any company that sells goods to the U.S.

Critics of the measure warn it will cause economic chaos.

What happens June 21

The Forced Labor Prevention Act would penalize importers and seize their goods by toughening older forced-labour laws with unprecedented new measures.

It reverses the burden of proof: guilty until proven innocent. 

From now on, if you're shipping anything into the U.S., and if U.S. officials find out that any of it — even a bit of it — comes from Xinjiang or from any entity on a future watchlist, it'll be seized unless you can prove there was no forced labour involved.

Needless to say, it won't be easy. 

Importers call it a logistical nightmare and have been pleading with the U.S. government to delay implementation

Seen here is a protest last year outside the Canadian embassy in Washington, D.C., where people demanded that countries label China's actions in Xinjiang as a genocide. (Leah Millis/Reuters)

Companies say there's no clarity about how this will work; warn it could raise costs and worsen inflation; and say it's mind-bogglingly complex to weed out every forbidden fibre from fabrics that get sold, and re-sold, across several countries before becoming a final product.

One firm that tracks these illicit goods says its artificial intelligence software counts millions of buyer-seller relationships around the world involving entities linked to forced labour in Xinjiang.

The firm's co-founder says his software sees nearly one million direct business-to-business connections with forced labour, and seven million second-hand connections.

"It's in everything," said Evan Smith, whose company, Altana, works with government agencies and companies to map those networks. "Your razor blades, your T-shirts, your antibiotics, your spice rack, your diapers. This stuff is really touching so much of the everyday economy." 

WATCH | Marketplace journalists question companies over forced labour:

Chinese tomato companies questioned by undercover CBC journalists over forced Uyghur labour

3 years ago
Duration 2:47
CBC Marketplace's Asha Tomlinson and Eric Szeto posed as tomato brokers to get access to Chinese tomato companies and asked them questions about the use of Uyghur labour in their workforce. In Xinjiang, a remote area of western China, Uyghurs are subjected to mass detention, surveillance and torture by the Chinese government.

Spillover effect on Canada

Make no mistake: this change will have a spillover effect in Canada. Partly because we operate in a trade area with so many cross-border businesses.

This country also has legal obligations under the new North American trade deal: it's committed to stopping forced-labour imports, and the deal also created a forced-labour task force to monitor the issue in the U.S.

Canada enters this era lagging behind; it has not prevented a single shipment since the new North American trade pact took effect, according to a report in The Globe and Mail.

Canada is now looking to tighten its rules with a bill that's nearly passed through Parliament that would force companies to produce annual reports on their supply chains.

The Forced Labor Prevention Act passed through the U.S. Congress last year with support from both parties. Republican Sen. Marco Rubio, seen here, was one of its co-sponsors. The law's toughest provision takes effect this month. (Octavio Jones/Reuters)

The United States has had a forced-labour law on the books for nearly a century — since 1930. It's progressively toughened that law, and has been stopping or seizing hundreds of shipments in recent years. 

But importers sound panicked about the newest change. Some voiced their worries last week at a U.S. briefing session for industry.

U.S. Customs deluged with panicked questions

CBC News listened in on an online briefing where businesses flooded U.S. Customs officials with far more questions than could be answered in the allotted time.

More than 700 people participated in the briefing, typing out questions like: What proof of innocence is sufficient? How do you define a Xinjiang product — with an address? Will there be DNA testing on cotton fibres? Will companies be liable for the actions of their suppliers' supplier? And what happens to seized goods — can companies get them back and sell them elsewhere?

Some participants expressed frustration. One said supply chain problems are already a major drag on the U.S. economy and that this could worsen shipping delays.

Security guards stand at the gates of what is officially known as a vocational skills education centre in Xinjiang, China, in 2018. The region's forced-labour camps and re-education facilities are aimed at diluting the Uyghur identity. (Thomas Peter/Reuters)

Others vented about the reversed burden of proof: "Proving a negative is nearly impossible. How would someone prove that all presenters [in this briefing] are NOT forced to be here?"

U.S. officials promised more specific guidance will be released on June 21, the day the new law takes effect. Officials insisted the new law will be applied immediately.

Compounding the complication is pressure from China. 

That pressure includes threats. Companies that raise concerns about rights abuses are hit with boycotts in China. H&M was forced to close numerous stores. 

China also has a new law allowing it to punish companies deemed to interfere in its internal affairs — the consequences include possible asset seizures; denial of entry into China; and a ban on Chinese citizens working with the company. 

"[These competing U.S.-Chinese threats] have companies in an impossible situation," said Eric Miller, a Canadian-born, U.S.-based trade consultant who has clients in the clothing industry.

China fights back

The Chinese government position: That claims of genocide are a fabricated scandal, being used by the West as an economic weapon to hurt China.

In Beijing's description, its crackdown on Uyghur identity, with suspected nationalists sent to re-education and work camps, is an effort to bring national unity following past separatist terrorism. And it calls the U.S. a hypocrite given its own use of prison labour in various states.

China is also making it harder to trace products to Xinjiang.

For example, Uyghur prisoners are being moved to work in factories elsewhere in China: one Australian study found more than 80,000 Uyghurs were transferred out of Xinjiang between 2017 and 2019, and other reports say those forced transfers keep happening.

Mapping transactions was challenging even before this change. Miller counts 101 steps to make a simple T-shirt, from gathering the cotton to shipping the final product, across multiple factories, in different countries with different legal systems.

All this helps explain why Xinjiang cotton keeps showing up even in products of companies that say they've changed their practices. It's reportedly happened to Adidas, Puma and Hugo Boss

A guard stands in a watchtower of Kashgar prison in Kashgar, Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China, May 3, 2021. Picture taken May 3, 2021.
A guard stands in a watchtower of Kashgar prison in Kashgar, Xinjiang, last year. (Thomas Peter/Reuters)

According to several surveys on hundreds of U.S. fashion products by the forensic analysis company Oritain, around 16 per cent contained traces of what appeared to be Xinjiang cotton.

The head of a Canadian industry lobby group said the U.S. policy is creating maximum confusion.

"Lots of doomsday scenarios," is how Bob Kirke, executive director of the Canadian Apparel Federation, described the industry mood. "We're now less than a month away. And we have no guidance."

A tearful Uyghur woman is photographed at a re-education camp in Xinjiang, China. Photos of more than 2,800 detainees are included in a leak called the Xinjiang Police Files. (Xinjiang Police Files/International Consortium of Investigative Journalists)

'It really upsets me'

Rayhan Asat, however, has little patience for complaints about how complex this will be. She said the challenge for companies pales in comparison to what her people face — being forced into re-education camps; tortured in so-called tiger chairs; enslaved; and having their culture beaten out of them.

"For these companies to cite difficulty? Let me tell you what's difficult," she said in an interview with CBC News.

She said that after his years in solitary confinement, her brother Ekpar looks like a shadow of the buoyant tech entrepreneur she once knew. 

Asat said he's only granted a video or phone call a few times a year. The calls typically last a minute, and if he hasn't said goodbye at 59 seconds, he gets cut off with no farewell.

A woman with long brown hair, pictured from the shoulder up via webcam. Her mouth is open mid-sentence. Behind her is an image of a man.
Rayhan Asat is seen testifying before the Canadian House of Commons in a 2020 virtual hearing. Pictured in the background is her imprisoned brother Ekpar Asat. (Parliament of Canada)

"It really upsets me, to be honest. … The difficulty of doing due diligence is nothing compared to the human suffering taking place in the Uyghur region."

Asat said international companies have been on notice for years that the Uyghur region is awash in forced labour, and they could have acted sooner if they cared.

WATCH | Report highlights alleged abuses in Xinjiang:

U.K. must act on China's treatment of Uyghurs, report says

3 years ago
Duration 3:37
A new report suggests that the U.K. needs to pressure China to end its human rights abuses of the Uyghur Muslim minority. The report calls for a boycott on certain goods and a ban on some international sporting events.

New law could create a new industry

New technologies could be part of the solution.

Oritain, for example, does DNA analysis. Altana, which maps out supply chain relationships and warns clients if they're working with a firm linked to forced labour, was co-founded by Alan Bersin, a former U.S. customs commissioner under Barack Obama, with the specific goal of cracking down on forced labour.

Companies are creating new tracking services. For example, Altana uses artificial intelligence to sift through billions of data points to warn customers if their supply chain includes forced labour. (Altana Atlas)

Bersin's partner, Evan Smith, describes one encounter a few weeks ago with a major apparel brand Altana has begun working with.

He said the company believed it had weeded forced-labour goods out of its supply chain. But it was stunned to hear that a Sri Lankan garment mill it worked with had a Vietnamese supplier working with a Chinese company partnered with a Xinjiang entity.

An executive called the Sri Lankan mill, which, Smith said, at first insisted it had broken off any Xinjiang ties — then admitted there might have been an exception.

This sort of tracking will carry new costs for companies. Smith's firm charges six-figure fees for now, and will add less pricey services eventually.

He said companies better get used to this new reality.

Protesters held a sign against China's Uyghur camps outside the Vancouver home of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou during her detention in Canada in 2020. (Lindsey Wasson/Reuters)

Smith compares it to the post-9/11 moment when the U.S. toughened financial-disclosure laws for banks as part of its anti-terrorism efforts.

"It's hard. But it's possible," he said.

"And the private sector should assume it will have no choice. … This is going to become the norm, and not the exception. … All things are pointing to a new paradigm: Thou shalt know your supply chain."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Alexander Panetta is a Washington-based correspondent for CBC News who has covered American politics and Canada-U.S. issues since 2013. He previously worked in Ottawa, Quebec City and internationally, reporting on politics, conflict, disaster and the Montreal Expos.

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