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Ralph Lauren probed in Canada over Uighur forced labour claims
Fashion designer Ralph Lauren poses for pictures on the red carpet upon arrival to attend the British Fashion Awards 2016 in London on December 5, 2016. Canadas corporate watchdog on August 15, 2023 launched an investigation of Ralph Laurens Canadian unit over allegations the fashion giant used forced labour from Chinas Uighur minority. — AFP pic

OTTAWA, Aug 16 — Canada’s corporate watchdog yesterday launched an investigation of Ralph Lauren’s Canadian unit over allegations the fashion giant used forced labour from China’s Uighur minority.

The announcement follows similar probes of Nike Canada and Canadian mining firm Dynasty Gold, which the Canadian Ombudsperson for Responsible Enterprise (CORE) began last month.

A coalition of 28 civil society organisations last year filed a complaint with the watchdog alleging "Ralph Lauren Canada has supply relationships with Chinese companies that use or benefit from the use of Uighur forced labour.”

"I have decided that the Ralph Lauren complaint warrants an investigation,” ombudsperson Sheri Meyerhoffer said in a statement.

The brand’s US parent company, she noted, has disputed Canadian jurisdiction over the matter, arguing that its subsidiary "is not responsible for decision-making” and all of its operations are overseen by the company’s US headquarters.

The Ottawa-based Uighur Rights Advocacy Project welcomed the investigation in a statement.

"There is credible evidence that Ralph Lauren is linked to numerous Chinese companies that use Uighur forced labour in their supply chains,” it said.

Rights groups say more than one million Uighurs and other mostly Muslim minorities have been held in re-education camps in China’s western Xinjiang region, with a slew of abuses that include forced labour.

Lawmakers in Western nations, including Canada, have called the crackdown in Xinjiang a genocide, and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights has referred to the treatment of Uighurs as crimes against humanity.

Beijing denies the accusations, describing the facilities as vocational centres designed to curb extremism. — AFP

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