Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Biden signs bills on Chinese imports, ALS research

- By Darlene Superville

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden signed a bill into law Thursday to block imports from China’s Xinjiang region unless businesses can prove the items were made without forced labor, the latest in a series of intensifyi­ng U.S. penalties against the Asian power for alleged abuses.

The measure had to overcome some initial hesitation from the White House, as well as corporate opposition, to win final passage last week in the Senate, following earlier House passage. Mr. Biden also signed a separate bill Thursday funding research into a cure for Lou Gehrig’s disease.

“Today, I signed the bipartisan Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act,” Mr. Biden said on Twitter, along with a photo of him as he signed the legislativ­e text at his desk in the Oval Office. “The United States will continue to use every tool at our disposal to ensure supply chains are free from the use of forced labor — including from Xinjiang and other parts of China.”

The new law is the latest in a series of attempts by the U.S to get tough with China over its alleged systemic and widespread abuse of ethnic and religious minorities in its western region, especially Xinjiang’s predominan­tly Muslim Uyghurs.

It requires U.S. government agencies to expand their monitoring of the use of forced labor by China’s ethnic minorities. Crucially, it creates a presumptio­n that goods coming from Xinjiang are made with forced labor. Businesses will have to prove that forced labor, including by workers transferre­d from Xinjiang, was not used in manufactur­ing the product before it will be allowed into the U.S.

The House and Senate each passed the measure with overwhelmi­ng support from Democrats and Republican­s.

It wasn’t until shortly before the Senate voted last week that the White House said Mr. Biden supported the measure. The announceme­nt followed months in which the White House declined, despite repeated questionin­g, to take a public stand on an earlier version of the measure.

The United States says China is committing genocide in its treatment of the Uyghurs. That includes widespread reports by rights groups and journalist­s of forced sterilizat­ion and large detention camps where many Uyghurs allegedly are forced to work in factories.

China denies any abuses and says the steps it has taken are necessary to combat terrorism and a separatist movement.

The U.S. cites raw cotton, gloves, tomato products, silicon and viscose, fishing gear and components in solar energy as among goods alleged to have been produced using forced labor in Xinjiang, a resource-rich mining region that is important for agricultur­al production. The region also is home a booming industrial sector.

Detainees also are moved outside Xinjiang and put to work in factories, including in the apparel and textiles, electronic­s, solar energy and automotive sectors, the U.S. says.

Some big corporatio­ns lobbied against the measure. Apple, like Nike and other companies with production done in China, said it had found no sign of forced labor from Xinjiang.

The White House also recently announced that it would stage a diplomatic boycott of the coming Winter Olympics in Beijing, citing China’s “egregious human rights abuses and atrocities in Xinjiang.” U.S. athletes will be allowed to compete under a diplomatic boycott, but the president and other U.S. dignitarie­s will not travel to the games, which open in February.

While Mr. Biden signed the Uyhgur bill in private, the White House arranged a public signing ceremony — with guests participat­ing remotely — for the Accelerati­ng Access to Critical Therapies for ALS Act.

The law will funnel $100 million annually between 2022 and 2026 into research into Lou Gehrig’s disease, an incurable neurodegen­erative disorder also known as amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis, and similar diseases.

ALS is named for the New York Yankees first baseman who retired in 1939 because of the disease. Gehrig died in 1941.

 ?? Patrick Semansky/Associated Press ?? President Joe Biden signs the "Accelerati­ng Access to Critical Therapies for ALS Act" into law during a ceremony Thursday in the South Court Auditorium on the White House campus in Washington.
Patrick Semansky/Associated Press President Joe Biden signs the "Accelerati­ng Access to Critical Therapies for ALS Act" into law during a ceremony Thursday in the South Court Auditorium on the White House campus in Washington.

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