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UN report on Xinjiang ups pressure on brands from Nike to Airbnb

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UN report on Xinjiang ups pressure on brands from Nike to Airbnb

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia – A United Nations evaluation that China’s therapy of Uighurs might quantity to “crimes towards humanity” is the newest damning report to lift strain on multinationals like Nike and Tesla to rethink their operations in Xinjiang.

In a long-awaited 45-page report launched on Thursday, the UN Excessive Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) known as on companies in China’s far-western area to take “all potential measures” to respect human rights, together with by way of “enhanced human rights due diligence”.

The OHCHR report, launched on the final day of rights chief Michelle Bachelet’s time period, made explicit point out of corporations concerned in safety and surveillance, recommending a strengthened “human rights danger evaluation” for the sector. China’s Everlasting Mission to the UN rejected the report as “disinformation” and “lies fabricated by anti-China forces and out of presumption of guilt”.

The UN’s damning evaluation comes after Tomoya Obokata, the UN particular rapporteur on slavery, stated earlier this month that it was “affordable to conclude” that compelled labour was going down within the area.

Justine Nolan, an knowledgeable on the intersection between enterprise and human rights on the College of New South Wales, stated the report meant it was “not potential for any state, enterprise or particular person to have believable deniability concerning the wide-ranging human rights abuses which have, and are persevering with to happen, in Xinjiang.”

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“This poses a problem for a lot of corporations who’re persevering with to supply merchandise from Xinjiang,” Nolan advised Al Jazeera, including that corporations ought to assume their “provide chains are tainted with fashionable slavery and shouldn’t be sourcing from the area except they’ll disprove this”.

“Pulling out of a area or manufacturing unit ought to all the time be a final resort however whether it is merely unattainable to independently confirm working circumstances in your manufacturing amenities, then primarily based on this report an organization ought to assume there are ongoing human rights abuses primarily based on manufacturing popping out of Xinjiang.”

Authorized and reputational dangers

Main worldwide corporations, together with family manufacturers similar to Nike, Airbnb, Tesla, Siemens and Volkswagen, have confronted blowback from rights teams and Western governments in recent times for doing enterprise in Xinjiang, a significant producer of the worldwide provide of cotton and polysilicon, the important thing uncooked materials for photo voltaic panels.

A 2020 report by the Australian Strategic Coverage Institute, a Canberra-based think-tank, recognized 82 worldwide manufacturers as benefitting from Uighur labour.

In June, United States customs authorities began implementing the Uyghur Compelled Labour Prevention Act, which bans the import of products from Xinjiang except it may be proved that they weren’t produced utilizing compelled labour.

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Regardless of the sweeping scope of the laws, which some multinational corporations and enterprise teams opposed on the grounds that it could upend provide chains, US officers have indicated that enforcement will likely be initially targeted on 4 high-risk sectors – attire, cotton, tomatoes and polysilicon – in addition to shipments coming immediately from Xinjiang and firms sanctioned for utilizing compelled labour.

“China continues to dominate the worldwide manufacturing of clothes and textiles, and so the availability chains of many international manufacturers have been marred by associations with Chinese language compelled labour,” stated Nolan, the UNSW knowledgeable.

“It is a drawback not just for manufacturers with direct manufacturing connections to factories or fields in Xinjiang.”

Julien Chaisse, an knowledgeable in funding and commerce at Metropolis College of Hong Kong, stated he anticipated additional “decoupling and isolation” between China and Western international locations.

“Though many international locations had began as early as 2018 to request their corporations to carry out tighter due diligence on the dangers of doing enterprise in Xinjiang, the UN report is probably going going to require these international locations to assessment and additional tighten the due diligence obligations,” Chaisse advised Al Jazeera.

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“Virtually, it means from a pure enterprise angle that corporations sourcing immediately – and even not directly – from Xinjiang or partaking within the Xinjiang market will likely be scrutinised much more than earlier than; they are going to be uncovered to authorized and reputational dangers of their international locations of origin.”

Volkswagen has operated a manufacturing unit in Xinjiang’s capital Urumqi since 2013 [File: China Daily via Reuters]

Apart from focusing on imports tainted by compelled labour, the US and different Western nations have in recent times additionally sanctioned dozens of Chinese language corporations, a lot of them tech corporations similar to Hikvision and Dahua that produce surveillance expertise, for his or her alleged complicity in human rights violations in Xinjiang.

Charles Rollet, an analyst at surveillance analysis group IPVM, stated that whereas the UN evaluation may make some multinational corporations suppose twice about beginning operations in Xinjiang, it could have little impact on Chinese language tech corporations already working within the area.

“China is just not just like the US the place some corporations or CEOs actively criticise sure authorities insurance policies,” Rollet advised Al Jazeera. “This dangers arrest, retaliation towards the corporate, or each. Folks’s Republic of China tech and surveillance corporations are closely concerned in authorities surveillance already, in order that they haven’t any actual qualms with Xinjiang.”

Whereas international manufacturers similar to Nike have pledged to beef up their auditing procedures towards compelled labour, worldwide corporations have nonetheless proven an urge for food for sustaining and even increasing operations within the area.

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In January, Tesla, the Texas-based electrical carmaker, got here beneath hearth from US lawmakers and rights activists when it introduced the opening of a brand new showroom in Xinjiang.

In June, Volkswagen’s outgoing China CEO Stephan Wollenstein stated the corporate deliberate to maintain making vehicles within the area and was open to a go to by a company-nominated human rights specialist to its plant within the capital, Urumqi.

The German auto big has repeatedly stated that its operations don’t depend on compelled labour and insisted its presence in Xinjiang has a “constructive influence”.

Nike, Airbnb, Volkswagen, Tesla, and Siemens have been contacted for remark.

Whereas coming beneath strain for working in Xinjiang, worldwide manufacturers that do acknowledge issues about alleged human rights violations danger invoking the wrath of Chinese language nationalists.

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Final yr, Nike and style retailer H&M confronted boycotts by shoppers, e-commerce websites and celebrities in China after expressing issues about allegations of compelled labour of their provide chains.

A Hong Kong-based commerce lawyer, who requested anonymity as a result of sensitivity of the scenario, stated corporations working in Xinjiang had been in a bind.

“The UN report is prone to place further strain on corporations like Tesla and Airbnb who’ve already obtained destructive publicity for his or her operations in Xinjiang,” the lawyer stated.

“I might suspect that no matter remaining corporations are in Xinjiang will take into account this report, and stability the ESG/reputational dangers for persevering with to do enterprise there with backlash from Chinese language authorities and the Chinese language public for showing discriminatory towards China.”

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Finland probes Russian shadow fleet oil tanker after cable-cutting incident

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Finland probes Russian shadow fleet oil tanker after cable-cutting incident

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Finnish authorities are investigating an oil tanker that is part of Russia’s shadow fleet over whether it cut an electricity cable between Finland and Estonia.

The Eagle S was stopped by Finnish authorities after the Estlink 2 subsea electricity cable in the Gulf of Finland was disconnected on Wednesday. The tanker, which is registered in the Cook Islands and is carrying oil from Russia to Egypt according to ship tracking data, was seen passing over the cable at the time of the incident.

The aged tanker is part of Russia’s shadow fleet and is the focus of Finland’s investigation, according to people familiar with the probe. The Eagle S is also under investigation over whether it cut three communications cables in the Gulf of Finland, the people added.

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The shadow fleet is a group of old and often poorly maintained ships used by Russia to circumvent international sanctions on its oil exports.

The Christmas Day incident appears to be the latest in a series of pipelines and cables being targeted in the Baltic Sea by foreign vessels, sparking fears of deliberate attacks on critical infrastructure between Nato countries.

“We must be able to prevent the risks posed by ships belonging to the Russian shadow fleet,” said Finland’s President Alexander Stubb in a post on X after a meeting with security chiefs on Thursday.

Last year a Chinese container ship, the Newnew Polar Bear, cut a gas pipeline between Finland and Estonia but was not stopped by authorities as it was in international waters.

A Chinese bulk carrier, the Yi Peng 3, last month passed over two data cables between Finland and Germany and Sweden and Lithuania about the times they were severed. It stopped for a month in international waters between Denmark and Sweden.

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Chinese investigators finally boarded the ship last week, with Swedish, Danish, German and Finnish representatives present as observers. But Sweden’s foreign minister criticised Beijing for not allowing the lead Swedish investigator to board or to inspect the vessel, which has now left the region.

The Eagle S case is different as the ship voluntarily stopped inside Finnish waters, according to people familiar with the investigation, leaving no question as to jurisdiction. Ownership of the Eagle S is murky but it appears to be the only vessel owned by a Dubai company. Attempts to reach the owner on Thursday were unsuccessful. 

Authorities have not determined the cause of the disconnection of the Estlink 2 cable. Estonia has also said it will not affect its electricity supply. The cable is used to export electricity from Finland, which recently brought its latest nuclear power plant online, to Estonia.

Finnish Prime Minister Petteri Orpo said the country’s electricity supply would not be affected.

Finnish authorities are keeping an open mind on the latest incident, not least because dozens of poorly maintained vessels in the shadow fleet sail in the Baltic Sea.

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Environmental campaigners have issued repeated warnings about the dangers in the region and elsewhere of the dilapidated vessels.

In the Mediterranean, a Russian cargo ship under US sanctions for working with the Russian military sank between Spain and Algeria on Tuesday.

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Popeye, Tintin and more will enter the public domain in the new year

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Popeye, Tintin and more will enter the public domain in the new year

An enlarged cartoon of Tintin pictured on display at Paris’ Pompidou Cultural Center in 2006. The Belgian cub reporter is among the characters and works entering the public domain in 2025.

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Jan. 1 marks the dawn of a new era for Popeye and Tintin. It’s the day the nonagenarian cartoon characters officially enter the U.S. public domain along with a treasure trove of other iconic works.

The copyrights of thousands of films, songs and books expire in 2025, making them instantly available for people to use, share and adapt. The list includes classics like Virginia Woolf’s book A Room of One’s Own, the Fats Waller song “Ain’t Misbehavin’” and the Marx Brothers’ first feature film, The Cocoanuts.

The main thing they have in common is their age — under U.S. copyright law, their terms all expire after 95 years. All of the works entering the public domain next year are from 1929, except for sound recordings, which (because they are covered by a different law) come from 1924.

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“Copyright’s awesome … but the fact that rights eventually expire, that’s a good thing, too, because that’s the wellspring for creativity,” says Jennifer Jenkins, the director of Duke’s Center for the Study of the Public Domain, which spends months poring over records to compile the most famous examples.

Once in the public domain, these works become fodder for remakes, spinoffs and other adaptations.

That explains the recent wave of horror films starring Mickey Mouse and Winnie the Pooh, characters that entered the public domain in 2024 and 2023 respectively. The trend seems poised to continue: Jenkins says there are already three Popeye slasher flicks in the works.

“They’re capitalizing on the incongruity of this comic book character in a different genre and they get a lot of buzz,” she adds. “[But] when I sit back and look at the universe of remakes of public domain characters or works … the things that we still talk about that stand the test of time don’t tend to be these buzzworthy, kind of ew, grossed-out features.”

More enduring examples include West Side Story drawn from Shakespeare’s Romeo & Juliet, screen adaptations of Jane Austen’s Emma, Percival Everett’s 2024 book James (a retelling of Huckleberry Finn) and Wicked, the musical-turned-movie prequel to L. Frank Baum’s Wizard of Oz. 

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But these artifacts don’t only become fodder for big-name directors and authors — they’re available for anyone who wants to use them, from artists to high school orchestra directors.

Jenkins says she gets “adorable emails” from people who are drawing their own little Winnie the Pooh cartoons, and parents whose kids are talented musicians, eager to finally be able to perform certain compositions publicly and post them online.

In other words, the impact of public domain works extends far beyond the box office and Billboard charts.

“I’m excited about those things that not everybody’s going to notice — people really re-discovering some of these older works and engaging with them and appreciating them and making them their own,” she adds.

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Here’s a look at some of the works that are just days away from the public domain:

Characters

A Popeye balloon flies over the 33rd Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in Times Square.

A helium-filled Popeye balloon participates in the 33rd Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York in 1959, three decades after his comic strip debut.

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Tintin the brave cub reporter — and his dog, Snowy — will enter the public domain in the U.S. well before they will in the European Union, where they are copyrighted until 2054. That’s because EU copyright terms extend 70 years past creators’ deaths, and Belgian cartoonist Hergé died in 1983.

Closer to home there’s E.C. Segar’s Popeye, who made his debut in a January 1929 Thimble Theatre cartoon strip. He sports his signature pipe, sailor outfit, anchor tattoo and sense of humor, responding when asked if he’s a sailor: “Ja think I’m a cowboy?”

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He could have a whole new set of adventures starting in 2025. But there’s a catch: Popeye didn’t start deriving his strength from spinach until 1932.

As Jenkins explains, many cartoon characters develop over time and have been in copyrighted works year after year, meaning certain aspects of them may come into the public domain in different years. So only the original 1929 versions of Popeye and Tintin are fair game, at least for now.

“Definitely the Popeye from 1929 and everything that he says, all of his characteristics, his personality, his sarcasm … that’s public domain,” she says. “The spinach, if you want to be on the safe side, you might want to wait.”

Films

A promotional card for Clara Bow's movie "The Wild Party."

The Wild Party, Clara Bow’s first talkie, was released in 1929, making it public domain in 2025.

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Similarly, the original Steamboat Willie version of Mickey Mouse arrived in the public domain with much fanfare in 2024. In 2025, a dozen more Mickey animations will follow suit — including The Karnival Kid, in which he speaks for the first time.

“His very first words are ‘Hot dogs! Hot dogs!’ — so I guess that’s kind of cute,” Jenkins says. “And then he didn’t wear the white gloves in 1928, but next year, in 2025, we get the version of Mickey Mouse with the signature white gloves in the public domain.”

Sound is a big theme across the films making their public domain debut next year, since 1929 marked the end of the silent film era and the dawn of the sound film age.

The list includes the first sound films from major directors like Alfred Hitchcock (Blackmail), John Ford (The Black Watch) and Cecil B. DeMille (Dynamite), as well as Clara Bow’s first talkie, The Wild Party, and The Broadway Melody, the first sound film to win an Academy Award for Best Picture.

Other notables include Walt Disney’s The Skeleton Dance (the first of the Silly Symphony shorts); King Vidor’s Hallelujah, the first major studio film with an all-Black cast; and Alan Crosland’s On With the Show, the first all-talking, all-color, feature-length film.

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Books

This combination of photos show authors Ernest Hemingway in 1950, left, William Faulkner in 1950, center, and John Steinbeck in 1962.

From left: Ernest Hemingway in 1950, William Faulkner in 1950, and John Steinbeck in 1962.

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Among the many literary works entering the public domain next year are two of the most acclaimed books about World War I: Ernest Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms, and the first English translation of Erich Maria Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front — both authors served in the war themselves.

The list includes several detective mysteries: Red Harvest and The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett, Ellery Queen’s The Roman Hat Mystery, and Seven Dials Mystery by Agatha Christie.

There are also some literary debuts, including John Steinbeck’s first novel, Cup of Gold, and Richard Hughes’ first novel A High Wind in Jamaica.

Musical compositions

George Gershwin writes sheet music while sitting at a piano.

George Gershwin’s “An American in Paris” is among the musical compositions entering the public domain in 2025.

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The latest crop of compositions spans the era’s jazz standards, show tunes, pop music and more.

They include: Arthur Freed’s Singin’ in the Rain (which was featured in the film The Hollywood Revue of 1929, also entering public domain), George Gershwin’s An American in Paris, Maurice Ravel’s Bolero, Jack Yellen’s Happy Days Are Here Again (the campaign song for FDR’s 1932 presidential run), Cole Porter’s What Is This Thing Called Love? and Tiptoe Through the Tulips (the Joseph Burke version, not the 1968 Tiny Tim one).

“But if you felt like singing like Tiny Tim for some reason, and you could, you can record your own version of Tiptoe Through the Tulips next year because that song’s going to be public domain,” Jenkins says.

The Center for the Study of Public Domain specifies that musical compositions refer to “the music and lyrics that you might see on a piece of sheet music, not the recordings of those songs.” Those are covered by a separate copyright.

Sound recordings

Marian Anderson poses for a photo outside.

Marian Anderson became the first Black singer to perform at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York in 1955. One of her early recordings from 1924 will enter the public domain next year.

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Under the 2018 Music Modernization Act, sound recordings are protected by copyright for 100 years. It’s the particular recordings that eventually enter the public domain, not the song’s music or lyrics or later recordings from those artists.

These are some of the 1924 performances that will become available for legal reuse in January: Marian Anderson’s “Nobody Knows the Trouble I’ve Seen,” George Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue,” Jelly Roll Morton’s “Shreveport Stomp,” “Deep Blue Sea Blues” by Clara Smith, and “Everybody Loves My Baby (But My Baby Don’t Love Nobody But Me)” recorded by Louis Armstrong and Clarence Williams’ Blue Five.

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Dozens feared dead as Azerbaijan Airlines plane crashes in Kazakhstan

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Dozens feared dead as Azerbaijan Airlines plane crashes in Kazakhstan

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An Azerbaijan Airlines plane carrying 62 passengers and five crew has crashed while making an emergency landing at a Kazakhstan airport, with 29 survivors, including two children, taken to hospital.

Videos on local media showed a large explosion after the aircraft crashed into an empty field. Images from the scene showed passengers climbing out of the tail of the fuselage aided by emergency workers.

Those aboard were from Azerbaijan, Russia, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, Russian state Ria news agency reported, citing Kazakhstan’s transport ministry.

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Local media outlets reported that nine of those taken to hospital were in serious condition and that search and rescue operations were under way.

The plane, an Embraer 190, was travelling to Grozny in the southern Russian republic of Chechnya from Azerbaijan’s capital Baku, but was diverted to Aktau after flying into heavy fog.

Early media reports suggested that the plane hit a flock of birds, which affected control of the aircraft.

“After a collision with birds, due to an emergency situation on board the aircraft, its commander decided to go to an alternate airfield and Aktau was chosen,” Ria reported, citing Russia’s aviation agency Rosaviatsia. Local media also shared unconfirmed reports of an explosion of an oxygen canister onboard, leading many passengers to lose consciousness.

Baku has sent an official delegation to Kazakhstan to investigate the incident, Azerbaijan’s APA news agency said. The country’s president, Ilham Aliyev, left an informal summit of the Commonwealth of Independent States in Russia to return to Baku. He expressed his condolences to the those affected by the crash.

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Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Russian President Vladimir Putin had also extended his condolences to Azerbaijan’s leader.

Chechnya’s leader Ramzan Kadyrov expressed his condolences to the relatives of the deceased on social media. “We pray to the Almighty for [the survivors’] recovery.”

Photos on social media showed relatives gathering in Grozny airport to wait for news of their loved ones.

One man at Grozny airport said he had just received a video in which he could see his nephew had survived the crash. “Of course I am very happy,” he told a Ria news reporter.

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