
Australia’s anti-slavery commissioner has accused the Trump Administration of weaponising important human rights issues by seeking to impose tariffs against Australia and dozens of other countries for failing to do enough to prevent forced labour. Source: The Age.
The Albanese Government will push for the United States to scrap the proposed 12.5 per cent tariff, or at least reduce it to the less onerous 10 per cent rate suggested for some other countries, in its negotiations with the US.
Commissioner Chris Evans, a former Labor cabinet minister, conceded Australia was not doing enough to prevent forced labour in supply chains but said the Trump Administration was not motivated by a genuine concern about worker rights.
Mr Evans said the United States Trade Representative’s office had only conducted a “very cursory examination of the issues” involving one interview with Australian officials.
“This is not about modern slavery, which is an important human rights issue. This is a distraction and a weaponisation of trade measures, not about modern slavery concerns … This is an attack on Australian businesses and jobs.”
But he pushed back on Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s claim that Australia has “robust” and “world-leading legislation” in place to address forced labour and modern slavery.
Mr Evans said Australia’s Modern Slavery Act was ahead of its time when passed in 2018, but was now too light-touch.
“The legislation is not fit-for-purpose or at a gold standard level,” he said.
“We have real problem with our supply chains, especially in Southeast Asia. We need to be doing more to ensure the products Australians are buying are not tainted by forced labour.”
Mr Evans said Australia needed to introduce a due diligence obligation requiring Australian companies to move beyond disclosure and take reasonable, proportionate action to prevent forced labour in their supply chains.
But he said Australia was “by no means the worst offender” and that the Trump Administration’s push was “motivated by the wrong reasons”.
“It’s clear there is an agenda to impose higher tariff rates by the Trump administration,” he said.
Mr Albanese told ABC radio on Thursday: “Any tariff on Australian exports to the United States are unjustified, they’re inconsistent with our free trade agreement, and also with regard to the specifics that have been put forward by their trade representative.”
FULL STORY
Anti-slavery tsar says Trump tariff a distraction from human rights issues (By Matthew Knott and Nick Newling, The Age)
