H&M’s Xinjiang cotton ban sparks China backlash

The fashion retailer’s products had vanished from Chinese tech titan Alibaba’s e-commerce platform Taobao on Wednesday, while two popular actors cut ties with H&M and state media published commentaries criticising the company.Last year H&M said it would not source cotton from Xinjiang and was ending its relationship with a Chinese yarn producer over “forced labour” accusations involving minorities in the region.

The company’s statement came after a report by think tank the Australian Strategic Policy Institute pointed to H&M as a beneficiary of a forced labour transfer programme.H&M China in a statement on Wednesday night said it “does not represent any political position” and remains committed to long-term investment in China.The European Union, United States, Britain and Canada announced sanctions on Chinese officials on Monday in an escalating row over the treatment of China’s Uyghur minority group.Rights groups say at least one million Uyghurs and other mostly Muslim minorities have been incarcerated in camps in Xinjiang, where authorities are also accused of forcibly sterilising women and imposing forced labour.China denies the allegations and says training programmes and work schemes have helped stamp out extremism.”Spreading rumours to boycott Xinjiang cotton, while wanting to make money in China? Wishful thinking!” the Communist Youth League, the youth wing of China’s ruling party, wrote on the Twitter-like Weibo platform Wednesday.State media lashed out against what it called “lies” made with “ulterior motives”.Broadcaster CCTV criticised H&M for “eating China’s rice while smashing its pot” and accused the company of aiming to “destroy the development space of Chinese enterprises and workers”.Xinhua news agency added that “respecting facts” was the key bottom line.The office of actress Victoria Song — who used to endorse H&M — released a statement saying she no longer had a relationship with the firm and “the country’s interests are above all”. 

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