Rumors of 'forced labor' in Xinjiang refuted
By GT staff reporters
Recently, US lawmakers and an Australian think tank have
been sparing no effort on hyping up the so-called forced labor conspiracy in
Northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region and pushing for a bill to
limit US imports from Xinjiang.
To refute these rumors, the Global Times visited more than
70 companies and private workshops in four prefectures in southern Xinjiang and
found that accusations of forced labor in China are totally false. The smear
campaign launched by these anti-China forces could further undermine the
livelihoods of the Uygurs and some other residents in Xinjiang who are
currently living in poverty.
Experts said that US politicians' efforts in pushing
sanctions on China over so-called forced labor in Xinjiang aims to contain
China in the backdrop of the US-initiated trade war with China, and they also
want to promote a decoupling of trade ties between China and the US to thwart
possible restrictions in future strategic confrontations.
Following a report in late February from the Australian Strategic
Policy Institute (ASPI), which claimed China is forcing at least 80,000 people
from ethnic minority groups in Xinjiang to work in factories, on March 11, the
US Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC) released a report stating
that forced labor inside and outside of Xinjiang's vocational education and
training centers is "systematic repression" of minority groups.
Echoing the two reports, many US lawmakers and politicians
are pushing a bill in the last week to implement stringent limits on imports
from Xinjiang.
However, Global Times reporters conducted a research into
more than 70 companies, cooperatives and private workshops in Kashi, Hotan,
Kizilsu Kirgiz Autonomous Prefecture and Aksu in southern Xinjiang and had
conversations with many residents in the region to collect information on the
current employment situation. No evidence of forced labor has been found
throughout the joint research project, and employees' rights and interests have
been protected in accordance with laws and regulations.
The Global Times had contacted companies, including Foxconn,
Apple and Volkswagen Group, which had been implicated in "forced
labor" reports by Western media. They denied forced labor practices
occurring in their companies and Uyghur employees have expressed hope to extend
their contracts.
The Global Times also found that the World Uyghur Congress,
a US-backed regime change network seeking the fall of China, and its global
offshoots have played a significant role in hyping the "forced labor"
narrative in the media. Members of these organizations have been busy lobbying
US politicians to impose sanctions on China.
Rushan Abbas, head of the Campaign for Uyghurs affiliated to
the WUC who also worked for several US intelligence agencies, disclosed on her
Twitter account that she participated in the panel of the CEEC.
At a press conference on Monday, Eljan Anayti, spokesperson
of the Xinjiang regional government, rejected the report issued by ASPI as a
smear campaign against Xinjiang and said the report was full of unfounded
claims and fabricated stories.
Eljan also noted that ASPI has long been receiving funds
from the US government and US-based arms dealers, and it deliberately smears,
vilifies and demonizes China for its investors' benefits.
The ASPI's intentional interpretation of the
cross-provincial employments of people's own free wills as "forced
labor" is a most absurd tale. Eljan
asked, "So can we take it for granted that the people in Australia and
America are forced to labor and find jobs in different state and region within
the country?"
Unfounded accusations
All companies contacted by the Global Times stated that
there was no forced labor occurring in their factories and that the jobs
financially help Uygur workers and their families.
"At no time has
Foxconn ever had employees in its workforce anywhere who haven't voluntarily
joined our firm. Any allegations to the contrary are categorically false,"
Foxconn Technology Group, a major supplier for Apple Inc, said in a statement
sent to the Global Times.
It added that all workers at Foxconn are recruited openly,
compensated fairly and compliant with all relevant laws and regulations.
When asked to comment on the report on Thursday, an Apple
spokesperson referred to a statement previously given to the US media:
"Apple is dedicated to ensuring that everyone in our supply chain is
treated with the dignity and respect they deserve. We have not seen this report
but we work closely with all our suppliers to ensure our high standards are
upheld." Apple also said that the company interviews numerous employees
during annual assessments in their ethnic languages without managers present to
ensure the workers receive training and are aware of proper channels to voice
concerns.
German carmaker Volkswagen Group also denied "any human
rights violations" at a plant in Urumqi for its China joint venture SAIC
Volkswagen, to which employees come from "a number of different ethnic
backgrounds."
"We are convinced that availability of jobs for all
ethnic minorities will improve the social environment in the Urumqi
region," the company said in a statement sent to the Global Times.
Yidong Electronics Technology Co, which was also accused of
working with suppliers that use forced Uyghur labor, said that it has conducted
investigations within its factories.
"Findings of the investigation show that… neither local
organizations nor [the supplier] has ever forced workers to do anything against
their will," the company said in a statement, adding that the supplier
employed 100 Uygur workers.
"Such accusations against [the supplier]… is extremely
irresponsible," the company said.
After getting consent from its employees, Yidong Electronics
Technology Co showed the Global Times various workers' contracts, screenshots
of payment slips and photos of employees joining in team-building exercises,
including seeing movies, going for picnics and participating in art
performances.
During the coronavirus epidemic, the company asked all
employees to go into quarantine. In a screenshot from a group conversation
among employees, an employee named Guli was asked whether she would go back to
Xinjiang when her contract expires, and she said that many people want to
extend their contracts and they don't want to leave.
Employment transfers alleviating poverty
What is "forced labor"? According to the
International Labor Organization, forced labor refers to all involuntary work
or service exacted under the menace of a penalty or against one's own will.
According to the survey in Xinjiang, the Global Times found
that residents in the region, especially in southern Xinjiang which has long
been poverty stricken, have a strong desire to be employed to bring themselves
out of poverty.
Due to the harsh natural conditions, monotonous industries,
lack of arable farming land and poor vocational skills of locals, many places,
especially in southern Xinjiang, have been plagued by poverty. Transferring
surplus labor in villages has been a focus for southern Xinjiang authorities to
help with local poverty alleviation work.
According to data obtained from the Xinjiang authorities,
southern Xinjiang has transferred 151,000 surplus labor from poverty-stricken
families with 14,700 working in inland provinces. They mainly work in garment
factories, electronics, food and catering services. The average monthly salary
is above 3,500 yuan ($500) and many are paid 6,000 to 7,000 yuan a month.
Experts from Xinjiang said transferring employees to other more
dynamic cities in China meet Xinjiang residents' demands - some of them want to
broaden their horizons and learn more vocational skills; some see more job
opportunities and better salaries.
Officials in Xinjiang said that local governments provide services
for transferring labor, and local residents voluntarily sign up for these. It
is not a compulsory measure. Although various places have differing minimum
salaries due to the level of economic development, workers' rights and
interests have been protected, including daily shifts of no more than eight
hours, insurance and paid monthly salaries.
To sanction China
The smear campaign by US politicians and media outlets has
already undermined and could further undermine the livelihood of Uygurs and other
residents in Xinjiang who are currently living in poverty, said a manager of a
Xinjiang-based textile company who only gave his surname as Zhang.
After a Wall Street Journal report last year claiming that
his company had used forced labor, it has lost all orders from the US and
Europe, Zhang told the Global Times on Thursday.
"The Americans are terrible… There are no more export
orders from the US and Europe in all of Xinjiang," he said.
Zhang said that his company hires 1,700 employees, of whom
99 percent are from ethnic minorities and are compensated well above the
minimum wage in Xinjiang, enjoy social security and other benefits. The company
plans to lift nearly 600 ethnic minority families out of poverty this year
alone.
In response to a joint statement issued by five US trade
associations on their concerns over the "forced labor" issue in
Xinjiang last week, experts said that it does not represent the views of all
member companies and using business to interfere with China's domestic affairs may
affect these companies' business in China.
"Usually, associations need to represent the
entrepreneurs to lobby the government for certain interests, like lowering
tariffs. But the US trade associations have been abducted by a certain small
group of people regardless of its members' interests and the actual facts in
Xinjiang. Many US companies will also be affected by the statement," Lu
Zhenwang, founder of Shanghai Wanqing Commerce Consulting, told the Global
Times.
"If these trade associations really care about the
truth or workers' rights in Xinjiang, they could conduct surveys in factories
in Xinjiang and other places in China and they will easily find such
accusations against China are fabricated. I went to many factories in Xinjiang
where workers of ethnic groups are living a life that is no different to others
around the world," Tian Yun, vice director of the Beijing Economic
Operation Association, told the Global Times.
"Using businesses to interfere with China's domestic
affairs is not an unusual move for the US and it will use these tactics again
and again in the future," Tian said. "One of their aims is to
decouple trade ties between China and the US."
Chinese companies should make preparations in advance -
including shifting to domestic markets and developing new markets, Tian
suggested.
"It is well known that poverty alleviation and
eliminating hunger are primary targets for the UN's millennium project. The
main reason for Donald Trump winning the US election in 2016 was his promise of
increasing employment," Gu Liyan, a research fellow from the Xinjiang
Development and Research Center, told the Global Times.
Source: Global Times
Rumors of 'forced labor' in Xinjiang refuted
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