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Rebound in North American Economy Will Negate Need for Tariffs: Trudeau to Trump

Chinese Officials Sanctioned by US for Xinjiang Abuses Have History of Human Rights Crimes

Persecuting Uyghur Muslims in China’s far-western region of Xinjiang is but one of a slew of human rights abuses by the four Chinese officials who were recently sanctioned by the U.S. administration. The sanctions, imposed under the Global Magnitsky Act on July 9, barred four Chinese officials, as well as their immediate family, from entering the United States. The sanctions will also block U.S. properties that are under the individuals’ names and prohibit U.S. transactions with them, the U.S. treasury department said. In Xinjiang, home to roughly 11 million Uyghurs, at least 1 million Uyghurs and other ethnic Muslim minorities have been detained within internment camps and subject to torture and political indoctrination in an effort to coerce them into giving up their faith. But such persecution is not confined…

Rebound in North American Economy Will Negate Need for Tariffs: Trudeau to Trump

WASHINGTON鈥擯rime Minister Justin Trudeau urged Donald Trump to think twice Monday before imposing new tariffs on Canadian aluminum, saying the sector is emerging from the pandemic-induced production stance that prompted the White House to consider such measures in the first place.

Trudeau, who said he had spoken to the U.S. president earlier in the day, told him that with the North American economy getting back up to speed, Canada鈥檚 aluminum smelters would soon be back producing value-added specialty products for the American auto sector.

The spectre of new tariffs emerged last month after Canadian producers, unable to shut down production and with their usual customers hamstrung by the impact of COVID-19, were forced to make a more generic form of aluminum and ship it to warehouses in the United States.

That alarmed certain U.S. smelter owners and operators, who have been urging the U.S. trade representative鈥檚 office to slap fresh levies on imports from Canada.

Rebound in North American Economy Will Negate Need for Tariffs: Trudeau to Trump President Donald Trump (L) and Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau pose as they take part in a bilateral meeting at the Bellevue centre in Biarritz, south-west France on the second day of the annual G7 Summit attended by the leaders of the world’s seven richest democracies, Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the United States on Aug. 25, 2019. (Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images)

“I highlighted to the president that the pandemic has disrupted usual manufacturing processes and supply chains, and that has caused certain disruption in the aluminum sector that is starting to realign itself, given the economies are starting up again and manufacturing is getting going,” Trudeau said after a call with Trump.

“I impressed upon him that it would be a shame to see tariffs come in between our two countries at a time where we鈥檙e celebrating NAFTA and at a time where we want our businesses and our manufacturers to get going as quickly as possible.”

Canada has been on the outside looking in when it comes to the coming into force of NAFTA鈥檚 successor, the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement.

While Trump welcomed Mexico鈥檚 President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador to a celebratory event at the White House last week, Trudeau kept his distance, citing the tariff dispute and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic among his reasons.

Rebound in North American Economy Will Negate Need for Tariffs: Trudeau to Trump President Donald Trump and Mexican President Andr茅s Manuel L贸pez Obrador hold a joint press conference in the Rose Garden of the White House on July 8, 2020. (JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images)

The U.S. trade representative reportedly gave Canada a deadline of July 1 to impose export restrictions鈥攖he very day the USMCA took effect. That deadline has come and gone without a hint from U.S. trade ambassador Robert Lighthizer about what happens next.

Trudeau said he and Trump also discussed the Canada-U.S. border, where non-essential travel has been curtailed since March in an effort to limit the spread of the novel coronavirus. The 30-day bilateral agreement to limit discretionary cross-border travel without restricting trade or essential workers has been extended three times and is now set to expire July 21.

Since the last extension, however, the public health crisis in the U.S. has exploded.

More than 100,000 new COVID-19 cases were identified over the weekend, particularly in southern states that reopened early, with Florida emerging as the new epicentre. Canada has had 108,000 confirmed cases in total.

Hospitals in major urban centres across the United States are again nearing capacity and health care workers face another critical shortage of personal protective equipment like masks and respirators.

Trudeau demurred when asked whether this time, Canada might consider extending the 30-day window.

“We鈥檝e pledged to continue to monitor closely the situation that is constantly evolving,” he said.

“We will be discussing with our American partners what the next steps should be, and I think this is a situation that is evolving rapidly and we need to keep responding to the situation on the ground.”

By James McCarten

Focus News: Rebound in North American Economy Will Negate Need for Tariffs: Trudeau to Trump

Chinese Regime ‘Lashing Out’ at the World: China Analyst Gordon Chang

“What we’re seeing right now is a China which is lashing out at everybody,” said China analyst Gordon Chang. In addition to its encroachments on Hong Kong and the first fatal border clash with India in 45 years, “you’ve got the boat bumping and other incidents in the South China Sea, East China Sea; the increased tempo of dangerous intercepts of the U.S. Navy in the global commons; the repeated threats to invade Taiwan; all of these hostile words, these disinformation campaigns directed against the United States and others,” Chang said. The Chinese communist regime has become increasingly belligerent globally, and it “believes it can do what it wants,” Chang said, in an interview with The Epoch Times for the “American Thought Leaders” program. “We have to teach China for…