The News

U.S. to China: Free Men Who Probed Shoemaker for Ivanka Trump

WASHINGTON – The State Department called Monday for the immediate release of three labor activists who investigated a Chinese company that produced Ivanka Trump shoes in China. A news agency reported that the men were arrested or went missing last week.

The activists were working with China Labor Watch, a New York-based nonprofit, and investigating Huajian Group factories in the southern Chinese cities of Ganzhou and Dongguan.

The company has denied allegations of excessive overtime and low wages. It says it stopped producing Ivanka Trump shoes months ago.

In this photo taken 2016 and released by Deng Guilian, Hua Haifeng is seen during a visit to a park in Chengde in central China’s Hubei province. Photo: Deng Guilian, via AP

Up to now, the U.S. government hadn’t said anything about the fate of the men.

“We urge China to release them immediately and otherwise afford them the judicial and fair trial protections to which they are entitled,” said Alicia Edwards, a State Department spokeswoman.

She voiced concern about reports that Chinese authorities detained Hua Haifeng, and that activists Su Heng and Li Zhao are missing and presumed detained.

Edwards would not confirm if the U.S. raised the issue directly with China, saying she couldn’t comment on diplomatic conversations. White House spokesman Josh Raffel declined comment.

Ivanka Trump’s brand has declined to comment on the allegations or the arrest and disappearances. Marc Fisher, which produces shoes for Ivanka Trump and other brands, has said it is looking into the allegations. Ivanka Trump’s lifestyle brand imports most of its merchandise from China, trade data show. She and her father both have extensive trademark portfolios in China, though neither has managed to build up a large retail or real estate presence there.

China Labor Watch executive director Li Qiang says he lost touch with the activists late last month.

The group plans to publish a report alleging low pay, excessive overtime and possible misuse of student labor. The investigators also witnessed verbal abuse, with one manager insulting staff about poorly made shoes and making a crude reference in Chinese to female genitalia, according to Li.

In this photo from March 2016 and released by Deng Guilian, Li Zhao is seen at a scenic spot in Nanzhang county, Xianyang city, in central China’s Hubei province. Photo: Deng Guilian, via AP

The arrest and disappearances come as China cracks down on perceived threats to the stability of its ruling Communist Party, particularly from sources with foreign ties such as China Labor Watch.

Faced with rising labor unrest and a slowing economy, Beijing has taken a stern approach to activism in southern China’s manufacturing belt and to human rights advocates generally, sparking a wave of critical reports about disappearances, public confessions, forced repatriation and torture in custody.

Edwards said the U.S. remains concerned by “the pattern of arrests and detentions.” She said labor activists are instrumental in helping U.S. companies understand conditions in their supply chains and holding Chinese manufacturers accountable under Chinese labor laws.

MATTHEW PENNINGTON