Tag

Xinjiang

Feature

VW remains a sustainable investment for Union

With the successful special audit of its plant in Xinjiang, VW has gained more breathing room and investor confidence is bolstered. However, the location still has the potential to cause difficulties for the company.

By

VW volkswagen
News

Volkswagen presents long-awaited Xinjiang audit

The Volkswagen Group denies knowledge of any collaboration between its Chinese joint ventures and vocational colleges integrated into the state's forced labor system in Xinjiang.

By Marcel Grzanna

Feature

New insights bring Volkswagen closer to forced labor

New findings from the Xinjiang Police Files put pressure on Volkswagen. According to the reports, the company has close connections to universities recruiting students from the state's reeducation program. VW cites a hiring freeze in response.

By Marcel Grzanna

Lieferketten Xinjiang
Feature

Xinjiang's foreign trade grows despite Western sanctions

Products from Xinjiang have fallen into disrepute in the West. In response, Beijing is expanding the region into a massive free trade zone, where cross-border trade has already reached record levels this year. The US sanctions barely slow down the growth.

By Marcel Grzanna

China Shandong Food Industry Workers packing dried mackerel at a canned fish processor in Laoling city in east China s Shandong province Saturday, Sept. 09, 2023., Credit:CHU BAORUI / Avalon CHINA, SHANDONG, LAOLING PUBLICATIONxNOTxINxUKxFRAxUSA Copyright: xCHUxBAORUIx/xAvalonx 0804322384
Feature

Suspicion of forced labor in the fishing industry

Reports of forced labor are now also coming from China's coastal provinces: Uyghurs, but also North Koreans, are being forced to process fish and seafood for the European market. The transfer of these workers is part of a system researchers call the "camp-to-labor pipeline."

By Marcel Grzanna

Haiyuer Kuerban, Eva Stocker
Opinion

'Fear rules the life of the Uyghurs'

The World Uyghur Congress is appalled by recent media reports on the situation in Xinjiang. The Director of the WUC Berlin office, Haiyuer Kuerban, and its Senior Advocacy Officer, Eva Stocker, demand that government disinformation campaigns must be exposed.

By Experts Table.Briefings

Feature

Heberer and Schmidt-Glintzer continue to face criticism

After their opinion piece in the NZZ about their Xinjiang trip, sinologists Thomas Heberer and Helwig Schmidt-Glintzer attempted to explain themselves. However, that failed to convince other sinologists. Many see contradiction in the attempted justification instead of credible arguments.

By Marcel Grzanna