Home World News Chinese Activists Detained After Investigating Factory Making Ivanka Trump Shoes

Chinese Activists Detained After Investigating Factory Making Ivanka Trump Shoes

0
gettyimages 612914910 d66c70987c0f813d521868773f204a24be2351c3 s1100 c15

Equipment at a Huajian shoe factory in China’s Guangdong province, shown in September 2016. Ivanka Trump-branded shoes have been made here over the years, along with other brands. Greg Baker/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption

Greg Baker/AFP/Getty Images

Equipment at a Huajian shoe factory in China’s Guangdong province, shown in September 2016. Ivanka Trump-branded shoes have been made here over the years, along with other brands.

Greg Baker/AFP/Getty Images

A Chinese labor activist has been arrested and two others have disappeared after investigating alleged labor abuses at a factory that makes shoes for several major brands — including Ivanka Trump’s.

Hua Haifeng disappeared sometime Sunday while en route to the Huajian International shoe factory in southern China’s Jiangxi province.

On Tuesday, police in the province called Hua’s wife, Deng Guimian.

“They said, ‘You only need to know that your husband has been arrested on criminal charges,'” Deng told NPR by phone from her home in Hubei Province. “‘You don’t need to know anything other than that.’ “

Hua Haifeng works for China Labor Watch, a New York-based group that investigates violations of workers’ rights. China Labor Watch says two of Hua’s colleagues are also missing, and presumed detained.

Deng says she has not informed the couple’s two young children, her own parents or Hua’s, about the incident. She wants to keep from upsetting them. And she says she is indignant at how police have treated her husband.

“I understand and support my husband’s work,” she says. “I feel his work is legal and meaningful, so why should they arrest him?”

The Huajian factory makes as many as 20,000 pairs of shoes a year for the Ivanka Trump brand. They make millions more for others, including Coach and Nine West. Factory managers couldn’t be reached for comment by phone.

China Labor Watch director Li Qiang says that his investigators worked undercover in the factory for more than a month, and shot some eight hours of video footage.

gettyimages 634570892 b6230c9c1f01682797dec0ca23314d1d915ad80d s800 c15

People walk past the Ivanka Trump Collection shop in the lobby at Trump Tower in New York in February. Drew Angerer/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

People walk past the Ivanka Trump Collection shop in the lobby at Trump Tower in New York in February.

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

He says he has evidence that workers at the factory were forced to work overtime without pay. One instance happened, he says, after a batch of shoes was found to have defects.

“The workers all wanted to leave,” he says, “but they couldn’t, because if they did, they’d be fired. So they were forced to work until 1:30 a.m., and they had to go back to work the same morning at 7:10 a.m.”

Li says he also found evidence that workers were threatened with dismissal if they took sick leave, and that they were forced to sign falsified time sheets.

Li says he investigated the Huajian shoe factory precisely because it was making shoes for the Ivanka Trump brand, and he thought he could leverage that to help the workers.

“We’re helping Ivanka to discover labor abuses at the factories that supply her,” he says. “That way, she can improve her supply chain. We also hope that through her influence, we can reduce labor abuses on the production lines of multinational corporations.”

Li says he’s going to submit his video footage to Ivanka Trump’s company.

He believes that the police are trying to protect this factory because it makes shoes for a family member of the U.S. president. While he has no hard proof of this, he says he has investigated hundreds of factories in China — and while his staff have often been caught and kicked out, they have never been arrested until now.

He also rejects the police charges that Hua Haifeng and his colleagues were using illegal surveillance gear in the Huajian shoe factory. Li says all they had were cellphones.

When the factory became the subject of critical reports earlier this year, the state-run Global Times tabloid leaped to its defense, accusing Western media of “maligning the reputation of the Trump family by publishing distorted reports.”

Analysts say China’s government has not hesitated to avail itself of the back channel to the White House provided by Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner.

“China has no other choice,” People’s University international relations scholar Shi Yinhong said of Kushner in an interview ahead of last month’s U.S.-China Presidential summit at Mar-a-Lago. “Since Trump took office, U.S.-China relations have faced a rather dangerous situation. Luckily, China discovered someone they can talk to who has direct access to the president.”

Even as the Trump and Xi families gathered in Florida, China’s government approved three new trademarks to sell her branded products in China, although Beijing insists it gave Ivanka Trump no preferential treatment.

NO COMMENTS

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website.

Exit mobile version