Thank you very much for that important question. Forced labour has been one of the most effective tools the Chinese government has used in its repressive policies with respect to Uighurs. We're now hearing disturbing news that Tibetans have also been subject to forced labour practices.
In the last 20 years, China has effectively polluted the global supply chain with tainted consumer products, in electronics and now solar panels. More than 80 global brands, according to various reports, have been tainted by the ongoing forced labour practices.
Last December President Biden enacted a substantive bill, which becomes law in the enforcement posture, the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act. It presumptively treats everything coming from China to the United States as tainted product unless it is proven by the importers and manufacturer that these are not tainted or are not being made by modern-day slaves.
This issue has to be dealt with globally. The same thing is true in Europe, the same thing is true in Canada and the same thing is true in Australia. This is a global problem. Even the United States, with some of the toughest and most robust legal tools and enforcement mechanisms, cannot deal with this alone. We also need Canada's help in pressuring global businesses, in addition to putting in place whatever administrative and legislative tools are available, and persuading the businesses that there is no place for slavery in the modern era.
We need to use our consumers. We need to use our tools; there are tool boxes. We also need to use our pressure on businesses to force them to do the right thing. The business community has been complicit in the ongoing forced labour practices in China. It requires a Canadian, European and American joint collaborative approach, a strategic approach, to tackle it.