Newstral
Article
South China Morning Post on 2020-09-10 20:54
Apparel group urges US to assemble multinational campaign against forced labour in Xinjiang
Related news
- FXinjiang forced labour reported in multinational supply chainsft.com
- SUS issues restrictions on import of Xinjiang cotton and apparel products, citing forced labourscmp.com
- The evolution of forced labour in XinjiangThe Economist
- BChina Muslims: Volkswagen says 'no forced labour' at Xinjiang plantbbc.co.uk
- Xinjiang cotton: BCI attacked for removing statement on forced labourSouth China Morning Post
- US ‘forced labour’ law bans goods from China’s Xinjiang regionAl Jazeera
- VW says 'no forced labour' at Xinjiang plantBBC
- Over 570,000 Uighurs involved in Xinjiang cotton forced labour – reporttimesofmalta.com
- FXinjiang: China’s Xinjiang aluminium boom exposes global carmakers to forced labourft.com
- Xinjiang party chief meets UN labour group as China seeks to confront forced labour claimsSouth China Morning Post
- CBP Issues FAQs on Xinjiang Forced Labor, Apparel & Tomato Importers Due Diligence Required to Avoid Exclusion of Goodsjdsupra.com
- SUS ban on China’s Xinjiang cotton ‘would wreak havoc’, leading apparel group saysscmp.com
- SAs China’s cotton harvest begins, Xinjiang ‘forced labour’ law and global recession fears hobble demandscmp.com
- H&M cuts ties with Chinese supplier over Xinjiang forced labour accusationsSouth China Morning Post
- Xinjiang forced labour concerns threaten to derail China’s investment deal with EUSouth China Morning Post
- Chinese state media denies BBC reports of forced labour in Xinjiang cotton fieldsSouth China Morning Post
- US importers to face ‘crazy hard’ hurdles once bill targeting Xinjiang forced labour becomes lawSouth China Morning Post
- US lawmakers reach deal on bill to ban imports made with Xinjiang forced labourSouth China Morning Post
- SXinjiang ‘forced labour’ law leaves Chinese companies in a bind, with doubts over supply chain auditsscmp.com
- Britain to ban China imports linked to Xinjiang Uygur camps over forced labour, reports saySouth China Morning Post