US Blocks New Types of Chinese Products Under Forced Labor Act
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For the first time, a steel manufacturer and a sweetener maker are banned from exporting their products to the United States.
The Department of Homeland Security on Oct. 2 added two Chinese companies to its list of firms prohibited from exporting their products to the United States. The move is part of a broader effort to protect U.S. supply chains from forced labor practices in China’s Xinjiang region.
“Today’s actions reaffirm our commitment to eliminating forced labor from U.S. supply chains and upholding our values of human rights for all,” said Robert Silvers, undersecretary for Policy at DHS, who also oversees the federal task force responsible for making the entity list.
One of the companies targeted is Baowu Group Xinjiang Bayi Iron and Steel Co., Ltd., a subsidiary of the world’s biggest steel producer, China Baowu Steel Group.
DHS officials allege the company “repeatedly participated in the transfer and receipt of ethnic minorities” in Xinjiang, where the Chinese regime has subjected Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities to mass detention and surveillance.
The other company added to the list is Changzhou Guanghui Food Ingredients Co., Ltd., an artificial sweetener maker based in the eastern coastal province of Jiangsu. Information reviewed by U.S. officials indicated that this company sourced aspartame, a non-nutritive sweetener, and other materials from Xinjiang.
This marks the first time that the DHS has placed a steel manufacturer and a sweetener maker on its list of companies involved in the communist regime’s state-sponsored slave labor and abuses against the Uyghurs.
With the addition of the two new companies, the total number of China-based companies on the list—created under the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act enacted nearly three years ago—has reached 75.
Beijing denied these allegations and has threatened to sanction United States and other foreign companies that seek to reduce reliance on Xinjiang as a source for their global supply chains.
The PVH Group previously told The Epoch Times that the company maintains “strict compliance with all relevant laws and regulations in all countries and regions” where it operates and is in contact with China’s commerce ministry.
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