Intel apologizes in China after backlash
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Intel has apologized in China
following a backlash over a directive to suppliers not to source products or
labor from the Xinjiang region.
The US chipmaker told suppliers
in a letter dated December 2021 that it "is required to
ensure our supply chain does not use any labor or source goods or services from
the Xinjiang region" of China, citing government restrictions and
questions from investors and customers.
The company
apologized on Thursday after the letter sparked controversy in China.
"Although our original
intention was to ensure compliance with US laws, this letter has caused many
questions and concerns among our cherished Chinese partners, which we deeply
regret," the company said in a statement on Weibo, a Twitter-like service.
Human rights groups have
repeatedly accused Beijing of detaining Uyghurs and other Muslim minority
groups in Xinjiang in "re-education" camps and using them as forced labor, which
they claim is part of global tech and retail supply chains, either directly or
indirectly.
Sanctions from the United States
and other Western countries over Xinjiang have sparked a pushback from the
Chinese government, which calls the camps "vocational training
centers" designed to combat poverty and religious extremism.
In an email to CNN Business, an
Intel spokesperson said the company would continue to ensure its global
sourcing complies with applicable laws and regulations in the United States and
in other jurisdictions.
"We issued a statement in
China to address concerns raised by our stakeholders there regarding how we
communicated certain legal requirements and policies with our global supplier
network," it added.
Intel's letter prompted a
backlash on Chinese state and social media. People's
Daily, the Communist Party's official newspaper, called the
statement "absurd", adding that Intel is "biting the hand that
feeds it."
Chinese pop star Wang Junkai, the
brand ambassador for Intel Core, announced Wednesday that he had cut all ties with Intel
over its statement, saying "national interests are above all else."
On Thursday, Zhao Lijian, a
spokesperson for China's foreign ministry, said that "claims related to
Xinjiang, such as forced labor" are "lies by US's anti-China
forces."
"We hope relevant businesses
respect facts, distinguishing between right and wrong," he said.


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