Leicester Mercury

China slaps sanctions on Britons and H&M

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CHINA has announced sanctions on British officials and also targeted Swedish clothing retailer H&M in a spiralling dispute over complaints of abuses in the Xinjiang region.

The Chinese foreign ministry said a sanctions regime imposed earlier this week by the EU, the US, Britain and Canada was based on “nothing but lies and disinforma­tion, flagrantly breaches internatio­nal law and basic norms governing internatio­nal relations, grossly interferes in China’s internal affairs, and severely undermines China-UK relations”.

Beijing sanctioned four British institutio­ns and nine individual­s, including prominent politician­s who have criticised the treatment of the Uighur Muslim minority. It said they would be barred from visiting Chinese territory and banned from financial transactio­ns with Chinese citizens and institutio­ns.

“China does not stir up trouble, but China is not afraid when others do,” Yang Xiaoguang, China’s charge d’affaires in London, said.

H&M products have been removed from e-commerce platforms including Alibaba and JD. com following calls by state media for a boycott over the firm’s decision to stop buying cotton from Xinjiang.

Shockwaves spread to other brands as dozens of celebritie­s called off endorsemen­t deals with Nike, Adidas, Burberry, Uniqlo and Lacoste after state media criticised the brands for expressing concern about Xinjiang. Tencent, which

operates games and the popular WeChat message service, announced it was removing Burberry-designed costumes from a popular mobile phone game.

H&M’s approximat­ely 500 stores in China did not show up on ridehailin­g app Didi Chuxing or map services operated by Alibaba and Baidu, and its smartphone app disappeare­d from app stores.

It was not clear whether companies received orders to erase H&M’s online presence, but Chinese enterprise­s are expected to fall in line without being told. Regulators have broad powers to punish companies that fail to support official policy.

The ruling Communist Party’s Youth League launched attacks on Wednesday on H&M following the EU’s decision to join the US, Britain and Canada in imposing sanctions on Chinese officials blamed for abuses in Xinjiang.

Yesterday, the Chinese government announced penalties against nine Britons: former Conservati­ve leader Iain Duncan Smith, Lord David Alton, Tory MPs Neil O’Brien, Tim Loughton and Nusrat Ghani, Labour’s Baroness Helena Kennedy, barrister Geoffrey Nice, academic Joanne Nicola Smith Finley, and the chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee, Tom Tugendhat. The four institutio­ns facing sanctions are the China Research Group, the Conservati­ve Party Human Rights Commission, Uyghur Tribunal and Essex Court Chambers.

 ??  ?? A security guard helps a worker move boxes past an H&M clothing store in Beijing, China
A security guard helps a worker move boxes past an H&M clothing store in Beijing, China

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