Canadian Ombudsperson for Responsible Enterprise , Sheri Meyerhoffer, holds a news conference in Ottawa on Tuesday, July 11, 2023. The ombudsperson cited a B.C. company for using forced Uyghur labour, a claim the company denies. Ottawa's corporate ethics watchdog says a Vancouver-based mining company has allowed forced labour at its gold mine in the Xinjiang region of China, even though the firm lost control of the project before the alleged forced labour took place.
Tuesday's finding has Meyerhoffer recommending that Canada bar Dynasty from access to trade services and financial support. Meyerhoffer has been digging into allegations that Uyghur Muslims sent to what China calls "detention" or "re-education" centres are being forced to work.China insists the centres are meant to weed out Islamic radicalization, but there have been widespread concerns of exploitation since 2017.
The groups have raised concerns about non-consensual psychological counselling, language lessons and physical training.Chinese court filings cited in Tuesday's report show the public company had been unsuccessfully fighting the Chinese government to maintain control while repeatedly listing ownership of the mine in its corporate statements."Companies do not need to have operational control in order to be involved in human rights abuse," Meyerhoffer said.
"Dynasty's disregard for the complaint process and casual response to the complaint itself is disconcerting and falls far short of the standard of good faith participation," reads the report. Meyerhoffer's report says her investigation "did not uncover any evidence that Dynasty took steps to assess its potential involvement in Uyghur forced labour abuse at any point."
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