US Bans Seafood Imports From Chinese Fleet That Engages in ‘Modern Slavery’

US Bans Seafood Imports From Chinese Fleet That Engages in ‘Modern Slavery’
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas prepares to testify before the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Homeland Security in the Dirksen Senate Office Building in Washington, on May 26, 2021. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
Eva Fu
5/28/2021
Updated:
5/30/2021

U.S. Customs and Border Protection banned a Chinese fishing company from selling seafood products in the United States on May 28 over concerns that the firm was treating migrant workers like slaves.

The agency said it will immediately start seizing tuna, swordfish, and other seafood products from Dalian Ocean Fishing Co., Ltd., at all U.S. ports of entry, citing U.S. federal law, which prohibits shipments linked to slave or child labor. The ban also extends to products that contain seafood, such as canned tuna and pet food, according to a CBP official.

While the CBP has targeted individual vessels in the past, this marked the first time it has taken the action against an entire fleet of fishing vessels—numbering 32 in total—the agency said in a news briefing.

“Companies that exploit their workers have no place doing business in the United States,” said Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas in a statement. “Products made from forced labor not only exploit workers, but hurt American businesses and expose consumers to unethical purchases.”

The measure, or “withhold release order,” is designed to “protect vulnerable workers while leveling the playing field for U.S. fisherman and seafood producers,” said Troy Miller, acting commissioner at the CBP. He likened the labor practices of the Chinese fishing company to “modern slavery.”

Workers on the Dalian Ocean Fishing fleets, many of whom are Indonesian, suffer from “physical violence, withholding of wages, and abusive working and living conditions,” the CBP found in an investigation. It noted that their conditions met all 11 indicators of forced labor by international standards.
Four Indonesian fishermen died last year while working on Dalian Ocean Fishing’s vessels. Three of their bodies were unceremoniously dumped into the sea, according to The Jakarta Post, a daily Indonesian newspaper. The deaths prompted a joint probe between Jakarta and Beijing. Complaints from crew members regarding meager food, dehydration, and beatings ignited outcries in Indonesia.

The Dalian company exported $233,000 worth of seafood in the past fiscal year.

State Department spokesperson Ned Price said the CBP’s action “helps stop human rights abusers from profiting from forced labor.” The State Department revoked more than a dozen visas of “individuals complicit in illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing with links to human trafficking.”

The State Department in its 2020 human rights report also documented three Indonesian fishermen pleading for help who said they were trapped in a Chinese fishing vessel, mistreated, and coerced to work 20-hour days with no pay.

The United States has imposed a number of import bans over concerns of Chinese forced labor. Most of the measures have focused on China’s Xinjiang region, where more than 1 million Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities have been held in internment camps and undergo torture and other abuses.

Other persecuted faith groups, one of the largest being practitioners of Falun Gong, also suffer slave labor abuse in prison. The State Department report cited a woman forced to make artificial flowers, cosmetics, and apparel, which The Epoch Times reported on last August.
The Trump administration, during its last week in office, ordered a sweeping ban on all cotton and tomato products from Xinjiang, a major world cotton producer, amid reports that hundreds of thousands of Uyghurs were forced to pick cotton in the region. The broad ban could have a major impact on the global apparel industry.
Reuters contributed to this report.
Eva Fu is a New York-based writer for The Epoch Times focusing on U.S. politics, U.S.-China relations, religious freedom, and human rights. Contact Eva at [email protected]
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