China Daily (Hong Kong)

No ‘forced labor’ in industry, grower says

- By CUI JIA cuijia@chinadaily.com.cn

Cotton growing is a profitable business that all residents in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region want to get involved in, especially since most of the labor is now done by machinery, a leading grower said.

“The claim that ‘forced labor’ is involved in the cotton growing industry is just a joke for us,” said Saderdin Ahat, manager of the Demin Cotton Growers Cooperativ­e in Shaya county. “We have expanded the growing area this year because quality Xinjiang cotton is in high demand.

“Our agricultur­al activity isn’t affected by the boycott of Xinjiang cotton from some internatio­nal clothing brands at all,” he said in a recent interview. “The price of Xinjiang cotton is even higher than last year. I think people all know what’s going on behind the boycott.”

The cooperativ­e in southern Xinjiang’s Aksu prefecture, with 1015.8 hectares of cotton farmland, has 10 large seed-planting machines and four drones to spray pesticides.

“The mechanizat­ion level involved in our production has reached more than 95 percent,” said Saderdin. “We only need a few people to pick cotton on the edges of fields that large machines cannot reach.”

On March 30 last year, the Better Cotton Initiative issued a statement expressing concerns over doing business with licensed growers in Xinjiang during the 2020-21 cotton season over allegation­s of forced labor. Boycott measures were then taken by internatio­nal brands including H&M and Nike.

The allegation­s lack any factual basis as Xinjiang has achieved large-scale mechanizat­ion of cotton production through establishi­ng high-quality farmland, land transfers and national agricultur­al machinery subsidies, according to a research report on cotton production in Xinjiang published on Tuesday.

The report — “Tainting Xinjiang Cotton Cannot Be Tolerated: The research report on whether ‘forced labor’ exists in cotton production in Xinjiang” — was issued by the Human Rights Institute of Southwest University of Political Science and Law in Chongqing.

The increasing level of mechanizat­ion in cotton production in southern Xinjiang can be attributed to multiple factors, according to the report. The emergence of cotton cooperativ­es and commercial services of cotton production increased the use of machinery and equipment. Government subsidies also significan­tly reduced the prices of agricultur­al machinery, the report said, adding that through mechanizat­ion large cotton farms had tried to reduce labor costs.

The research team conducted field research mainly in southern Xinjiang’s Aksu and Kashgar prefecture­s since March.

In Aksu, the cost of manual cotton picking is about 5 to 7 times that of mechanized cotton picking. Besides picking cotton in areas that cannot be reached by machines, long staple cotton can only be harvested by hand.

Compared with other occupation­s, the high income from cotton picking makes it a very attractive job for people in southern Xinjiang, according to the report.

According to the region’s 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25), Xinjiang plans to ensure 80 percent of its cotton is picked by machines.

Saderdin said that the seasonal picking jobs can be easily filled by people from nearby villages.

Experience­d cotton pickers can pick 100 kilograms to 160 kilograms of cotton a day, which means they can earn 10,000 yuan ($1,562) to 20,000 yuan per harvest season, which lasts about two months, he added.

“Who would turn down a job opportunit­y like that? Rather than being forced to pick cotton, the competitio­n to get the job is actually heated,” Saderdin said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China