ANI
22 Jun 2025, 20:54 GMT+10
London [UK], June 22 (ANI): A recent investigation by The Bureau of Investigative Journalism has revealed that South Korean tech giant LG directly owns and operates a factory in China that employs ethnic minority workers under Beijing's controversial labour transfer programme, a scheme widely condemned by human rights groups as a form of state-enforced forced labour.
In March 2021, the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights sent a letter to the South Korean government expressing grave concerns over allegations of forced labour at Chinese factories linked to major Korean brands, including Samsung and LG.
While LG publicly claimed it had cut ties with the implicated supplier the previous year, it failed to disclose that it directly owns LG Panda Appliances, a factory in Jiangsu province employing transferred labourers from Xinjiang.
A video uploaded that same month by a Kazakh herder from Ili, now working on an LG washing machine assembly line, exposed the company's ongoing participation in the labour programme. He was one of thousands forcibly moved under China's labour transfer scheme, a system critics argue is used to forcibly assimilate Uyghur, Kazakh, and Kyrgyz minorities into Han-dominated urban industries.
The Bureau of Investigative Journalism (TBIJ), along with The New York Times and Der Spiegel, has uncovered that LG's factory is not an outlier. Their joint probe has connected at least 100 global brands, including Apple, Samsung, and Volkswagen, to China's forced labour system. Yet, LG is among the first multinationals directly implicated through ownership, not just supply chain entanglements.
Internal sources and labour recruiters confirmed to Der Spiegel that job transfers to LG Panda were approved by LG's headquarters in South Korea. In 2022, LG even held a recruitment drive at a Xinjiang internment camp known for using electric batons and forced indoctrination.
As per The Bureau of Investigative Journalism, despite multiple requests for comment, LG has not responded to the allegations. The company continues to operate another factory in Jiangsu that also uses transferred Xinjiang labourers. Trade data confirms that over 90,000 shipments have left these factories since the programme's inception, many destined for European markets, including Germany and Poland.
Labour rights experts warn that global brands are failing to account for the realities of their operations. 'This isn't about indirect complicity,' said Laura Murphy, a leading expert on forced labour. 'It's about direct involvement.'
As scrutiny intensifies, calls are growing for international investors and governments to take meaningful action against companies profiting from China's coercive labour systems. (ANI)
Get a daily dose of Manila Metro news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Manila Metro.
More InformationBEIJING/WELLINGTON: New Zealand's Prime Minister Christopher Luxon commenced his visit to China on June 17, seeking to strengthen trade...
BEIJING, China: A typhoon altered its course and struck Hainan Island, southern China, late on the night of June 13. Typhoon Wutip...
TOKYO, Japan: Japan has a new top sumo wrestler — and he's Japanese. Onosato, who weighs 191 kilograms (421 pounds), has become a yokozuna,...
Antwerp [Belgium] June 22 (ANI): With a 0-2 loss against Belgium, the Indian Women's Hockey Team suffered its sixth defeat in the European...
London [UK], June 22 (ANI): A recent investigation by The Bureau of Investigative Journalism has revealed that South Korean tech giant...
BEIJING, 22nd June, 2025 (WAM) -- China strongly condemned the U.S. attacks on Iran and bombing of nuclear facilities under the safeguards...
WASHINGTON, DC - U.S. President Donald Trump how bowed to pro-Israel elements in his administration and Congress, announcing that the...
ZURICH, Switzerland: The Swiss National Bank (SNB) lowered its key interest rate to zero percent on June 19 to respond to falling inflation,...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: The U.S. government is preparing to revise its influential dietary advice, with a significant shift: dropping the...
ZURICH, Switzerland: The U.S. saw an extraordinary rise in wealth last year, with more than 1,000 people crossing into millionaire...
THE HAGUE, Netherlands: The city that prides itself on being a beacon of peace and justice—home to institutions like the International...
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina: Since taking office in December 2023, Argentine President Javier Milei has implemented sweeping austerity...