Hetian Taida Apparel Co., LTD.

Key Buyers: Badger Sport
Country: China
Last updated: 2019

In December 2018, Hetian Taida Apparel, a Chinese supplier to Badger Sport, was identified by the Associated Press (AP) as operating within an internment and forced labor camp in China’s Xinjiang province. The WRC confirmed certain aspects of AP’s reporting in a memorandum sent to universities shortly thereafter. This investigative report is the product of a deeper assessment, drawing on a broad range of evidentiary sources.

The context for the actions of Hetian Taida and Badger Sport is the appalling human rights disaster unfolding in Xinjiang province, home to most members of the Uyghur ethnic group. The Chinese government is carrying out a massive and brutal repression of the Uyghur population, including the detention of more than one million people in internment camps. In these detention centers, which the U.S. government has called “concentration camps,” Uyghurs are denied the right to worship and speak their native language and are subjected to physical and psychological abuse, political indoctrination, and forced labor. Hetian Taida is located in the city of Hotan, the site of several internment camps.

Based on our investigation, the WRC concluded that:

The WRC report also reveals that:

Badger – which also owns the licensee Teamwork Athletic – maintains that there is no proof that Hetian Taida used forced labor. The WRC gave extensive consideration to Badger’s position and to the claims and arguments from Hetian Taida on which it is based. They did not stand up to scrutiny. The evidence that forced labor occurred, which includes satellite imagery of the internment camp where Hetian Taida produced Badger goods, is clear and convincing.

Notwithstanding Badger’s insistence that there is no definitive proof of forced labor, the company has agreed to take remedial actions identified by the WRC as necessary to address the violations of university labor standards enumerated in the report. Badger has agreed to:

Badger had already announced early this year, after the AP story broke, that it would no longer source from Hetian Taida or from Xinjiang province.

It is important to understand that full remediation, from a worker rights perspective, is not achievable in this case. As explained in our report, any attempt to aid and support the affected workers runs the risk of subjecting them to retaliation by the Chinese authorities. The best available substitute is for Badger to contribute to organizations working broadly to aid victims of the repression in Xinjiang.

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