The suspect part had been sourced by a supplier in the VW supply chain and not by VW directly, it was claimed.

It came as Volkswagen was hit by additional claims from German media that it had benefitted from human rights abuses in China’s troubled Xinjiang region.

  • @TheGrandNagus
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    208 months ago

    If you’re a maker of something as complex as cars, and you order a lot of your parts from a country like China, good luck not having anything that benefited from forced labour.

    I still can’t believe the west chose, of their own volition, to destroy their own manufacturing base. What a travesty.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      -58 months ago

      @TheGrandNagus

      If you’re a maker of something as complex as cars, and you order a lot of your parts from a country like China, good luck not having anything that benefited from forced labour.

      I still can’t believe the west chose, of their own volition, to destroy their own manufacturing base. What a travesty.

      If you don’t understand that, feel free to go to Xinjiang and work in one if the camps there. It may help you understand.

      I hope the EU will soon introduce its Supply Chain Law as planned and make the use of forced labour a crime that can be punished.

      • @[email protected]
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        38 months ago

        I understood his comment as the west chose to outsource a lot of manufacturing to Asia and now does not have the capability to do so locally anymore, i.e. destroyed that manufacturing capability.

    • Optional
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      -68 months ago

      The west chose? Man I must have been in the can for that decision.

      • @TheGrandNagus
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        88 months ago

        Yes. The West chose. Western companies did it, and western governments were fine with it.