Burmese fishermen prepare to depart from Benjina in the Aru Islands in Indonesia in February last year, following an Associated Press report on rampant slavery in the industry. (AP Photo) |
Obama ready to sign law banning slave-caught fish
AP / Bangkok Post | 12 February 2016
WASHINGTON — A bill being sent to US President
Barack Obama this week includes a provision that would ban US imports of
fish caught by slaves in Southeast Asia, gold mined by children in
Africa and garments sewn by abused women in Bangladesh.
The new law is aimed at closing a loophole in an 85-year-old tariff
law that has failed to keep products of forced and child labour out of
the United States.
An investigation by The Associated Press last year found Thai
companies were shipping seafood to the US that was caught and processed
by trapped and enslaved workers. AP tracked fish and shrimp from people
locked in cages and factories to supply chains of top retailers and
restaurants, from supermarket chains like Wal-Mart and Whole Foods to
restaurants including Red Lobster.
The companies all said they strongly condemned labour abuse and were
taking steps to prevent it. The Thai government and leading players in
its fishery industry have also taken a number of steps to crack down on
abuses.
As a result of the AP reports, more than 2,000 trapped fishermen have
been freed, more than a dozen alleged traffickers arrested and millions
of dollars worth of seafood and vessels seized.
On Capitol Hill, the AP investigation, along with other media reports
and political advocacy, helped pressure lawmakers "to finally strike
this obscene provision of US law", said Sen Ron Wyden, an Oregon
Democrat.
"It's an outrage this loophole persisted for so long. No product made
by people held against their will, or by children, should ever be
imported to the United States,'' he said.
The change is part of a wide-ranging bill that revamps trade laws and
bars internet taxes. It passed on a vote of 75-20 by the Senate on
Thursday. President Obama is expected to sign it.
The US Tariff Act of 1930 gave Customs and Border Protection the
authority to seize shipments where forced labour is suspected and block
further imports. However, it has been used only 39 times in 85 years in
large part because of an exemption that said goods made by children,
prisoners or slaves can be allowed into the US if consumer demand cannot
be met without them.
Lawmakers who drafted it during the Depression at the time placed
economic need over foreign labour rights, according to legal historians.
If signed by President Obama, imports on a Labor Department list of
more than 350 goods produced by child or forced labour — cotton from
Kazakhstan, wheat from Pakistan, lobsters from Honduras — may now face
federal law enforcement.
David Olave, a Washington-based trade consultant, said he's concerned
about unfair and overreaching seizures by Customs and Border Protection
investigators who would be hard-pressed to prove a product in a
particular shipping container was picked or processed by a forced
labourer.
And he said US firms have already been proactive in trying to keep
labour abuse out of their supply chains, well ahead of government
regulations.
"From my perspective, this is more of an image issue,'' he said, "It
looks bad, to have a law that says we want to stop child labour, unless
we really need it. It might have sounded okay in 1930 but it doesn't
sound good today.''
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