The following article is a brief report by R Islam, a Yorkshire-based anti-war activist who recently represented Friends of Socialist China on a delegation to the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, China, organised by the Xinjiang government.
The symposium was also reported in Xinhua and China Daily.
The International Symposium on Employment and Social Security was held in Urumqi on December 16, 2024. The context underpinning the event was the US sanctions imposed on companies in Xinjiang in recent years based on allegations of ‘slave labour’. The symposium was preceded by site visits to various manufacturing companies currently subject to US sanctions; these visits provided delegates the opportunity to form their own perspective on the validity of the allegations made by the USA against China. In attendance were diplomats from Palestine, Pakistan, Senegal, Yemen, Azerbaijan, Indonesia, Iraq, Türkiye, Hungary and elsewhere; journalists from CGTN, Radio France, the Irish Times, the Associated Press of Pakistan and several other outlets; representatives from the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation and the Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation Institute; and delegates from around the world, including well-known media personalities Li Jingjing, Andy Boreham and Daniel Dumbrill.
Sanctioned companies
Delegates were transported to the sites of two manufacturing companies sanctioned by the USA.
The first was Changji Esquel Textile Co. Ltd., a textile manufacturer. Prior to the sanctions, the company operated three branches in Xinjiang. However, after the sanctions, this number was reduced to just one. As a result, the company had to cut its workforce in half, dropping from 50,000 to 25,000 employees across its four sites, leaving many workers facing significant hardship due to redundancy. This firsthand account shed light on the tangible and punitive effects of sanctions, not just on company owners but also on the livelihoods of thousands of people. It was also evident from the site visits that the vast amount of advanced machinery introduced in recent years has significantly reduced the need for a large low-skilled workforce, thereby undermining the ‘slavery’ charges levelled by the USA. Despite these challenges, the company demonstrated a strong commitment to minimizing the environmental impact of textile production, and boasted of their ability to use just 10 percent of the water required by comparable processes.
The second company we visited, Baowu Group Xinjiang Bayi Iron and Steel Co. Ltd., is a steel and mill factory whose products, valued at billions of dollars, have been denied entry into the US—a measure that can only be interpreted as punitive. Similar to its textile counterpart, the steel mill strives to minimise its environmental footprint and enforces stringent health and safety protocols to prevent workplace accidents. These efforts challenge claims that workers endure harsh or exploitative conditions. The mill’s highly mechanised operations, including the use of massive agricultural tractors capable of performing the work of over a hundred people in a single hour, further contradict allegations of “slave labour” within the facility.
Symposium
The trip concluded with a day-long political conference addressing various aspects of working conditions in Xinjiang and the United States’ political agenda in making unfounded accusations of forced labour. Delegates heard firsthand testimonies from workers who had been made redundant at the textile factory, sharing the anxieties and hardships they endured as a result. However, they expressed gratitude for the local and national government’s intervention, which helped them secure new employment opportunities and rebuild their lives. Diplomats underscored the priorities of the United States—providing arms and funding for an unnecessary war in Ukraine and supporting and financing genocide in Palestine, all while levelling unfounded accusations of human rights abuses against China.
Conclusion
The examples of decisive leadership by local and national arms of the Chinese government in stepping in to safeguard people’s lives and livelihoods stand in stark contrast to the United States, where forced prison labour is widely exploited, most recently deploying inmates as firefighters to combat California’s wildfires—typically for wages far below the minimum standard, if they are compensated at all. Moreover, it is crucial to highlight that sanctions not only inflict significant hardship on the Chinese population but also harm people in the US. Imposing or increasing tariffs on imported goods contributes to raising the everyday cost of living for Americans, adding financial strain to households. Furthermore, Xinjiang is the heart of China’s solar energy industry – sanctions on Chinese solar panels, polysilicon and other components are directly impacting the US’s purported green energy goals.
The United States imposes sanctions unilaterally (and illegally), opting not to collaborate with the global community to address shared challenges. Adopting a more cooperative approach and learning from China and other nations would benefit the international community as a whole. With the recent shift of US users from TikTok to RedNote (Xiaohongshu / Little Red Book), we may witness tangible changes at the grassroots level—areas where such progress is critically needed but generally absent in the nation’s political leadership.