City
Epaper

US passes Bill requiring firms to disclose connection with forced labour in China's Xinjiang

By ANI | Updated: October 1, 2020 07:10 IST

Lawmakers from the Lower House of the United States Congress have passed legislation that would require US-listed companies to disclose if their supply chains are connected to forced labour in China's Xinjiang Uyghur autonomous region.

Open in App

Lawmakers from the Lower House of the United States Congress have passed legislation that would require US-listed compes to disclose if their supply chains are connected to forced labour in China's Xinjiang Uyghur autonomous region.

The "Uyghur Forced Labor Disclosure Act" was passed on Wednesday (local time) in a 253-163 vote by the US House of Representatives, South China Morning Post reported.

The Bill would require US compes to disclose whether any of their supply chain -- can be traced to internment camps or factories suspected of using forced labour of Uyghur or other ethnic minorities in China. The measure will now head to the Senate for consideration.

Republican Representative Bill Huizenga said that their party was in "robust agreement" with Democrats about the need to combat forced labour.

During the debate on the House floor, Huizenga accused Democrats of pushing through an "empty window dressing bill that hurts US investors and compes but unfortunately simply pays lip service to the Uygurs".

Meanwhile, Democrats said that only US-listed compes should be subjected to heightened scrutiny over forced labour in Xinjiang.

Last month, the House of Representatives had passed the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act to ban imports of products into the US that were made with forced labour in Xinjiang and sanction individuals involved in labour trafficking.

The Trump administration announced earlier in September that it will immediately block imports made in Xinjiang to end alleged forced labour practices.

Human rights groups have accused the Chinese authorities of detaining more than a million people, mostly Uyghurs, Kazakhs, and Kyrgyz, in a network of detention centres as part of an assimilation campaign.

China has denied the charges, saying the camps were built for vocational and Chinese language training.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: United States House of RepresentativesBill huizengaHouse Of Representatives
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalAustralia's House of Representatives Passes Bill to Ban Children Under 16 from Social Media

PoliticsInfiltrators, smugglers taking advantage of unfenced borders with B’desh: Tripura CM

NationalBJP leader killed in police lathi-charge in Patna

PoliticsBihar Assembly adjourned for the day after BJP legislators create ruckus, brandish chair

InternationalNepal PM acknowledges mistakes regarding controversial remarks as opposition ends house protest

International Realted Stories

InternationalWe are maintaining continuous surveillance to degrade, neutralise any threats: Vice Admiral AN Pramod

InternationalNissan Layoffs: Japanese Car Maker to Cut Over 10,000 Jobs Globally

InternationalJaishankar congratulates Australian counterpart Wong on her reappointment, discusses importance of zero tolerance against terrorism

InternationalPakistan stock markets react positively to ceasefire with India

InternationalPakistan confirms no Indian pilot in its custody