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Trump administration to block palm oil from second company in Malaysia over forced labor findings

MALAYSIA-ENVIRONMENT-OILPALM-LOGGING
Halved oil palm kernels are seen on the trade floor of a commodities conference and exhibition in Kuala Lumpur, 03 July 2007. Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi on 03 July vowed to fight illegal logging amid claims by the opposition leaders that criminal syndicates were engaged in the activity. Malaysia and Indonesia, the world's leading producers of crude palm oil, are leading a campaign to fight environmentalists' claims that plantations destroy vast swathes of tropical forest, pushing endangered animals like the orangutan towards extinction. AFP PHOTO/TENGKU BAHAR (Photo by TENGKU Bahar / AFP) (Photo credit should read TENGKU BAHAR/AFP via Getty Images)

 (CNN) -- The Trump administration will halt imports of palm oil from Malaysia over findings of forced labor abuses at the plantations of one of the country's top producers of the product, which is found in many everyday items.

It is the latest in a string of Customs and Border Protection restrictions aimed at stopping goods made with forced labor from entering the US market.

CBP issued a "withhold release order" Wednesday, allowing the agency to detain shipments of palm oil and palm oil products produced from Sime Darby Plantation Berhad.

Palm oil is the most used vegetable oil on the planet and can be found in everything from cleaning products to foodstuffs and cosmetics, such as lipstick and packaged bread.

"Palm oil is an ingredient in a lot of products that American consumers buy and use. And I think it's important for manufacturers and importers to be aware of where they're at higher risk of forced labor, and to demand that their suppliers are adhering to protecting human rights of their workers," said Ana Hinojosa, executive director of CBP's Trade Remedy Law Enforcement Directorate.

After a months-long investigation into alleged labor abuses, CBP determined that the company's palm oil production in Malaysia met the criteria to detain imports to the US.

Sime Darby Plantation Berhad claims to produce 15% of Malaysia's palm oil, according to CBP.

This is the second order focused on Malaysian palm oil in recent months. Earlier this year, CBP blocked imports of palm oil from FGV Holdings Berhad, a Malaysian-based agricultural company after a yearlong investigation.

The latest investigation found evidence of debt bondage, poor living and work conditions, lack of sanitation, manipulated wages and excessive overtime at Sime Darby Plantation Berhad, Hinojosa told CNN.

"In many cases, we also found instances of physical violence, sexual violence, intimidation," she said.

Hinojosa said the "vast majority" of palm oil comes from Malaysia and Indonesia. She said palm oil plantations in Malaysia are very remote areas -- away from transportation and communication.

The US imported approximately $410 million of crude palm oil from Malaysia in fiscal year 2020, which constituted approximately 31% of total US crude palm oil imports, according to preliminary CBP data. That does not include products that include palm oil.

In many cases, she said, there are armed guards at these plantations that restrict the movement of workers, and there is a "strong connection" between forced labor and countries or industries that rely heavily on migrant workers.

Sime Darby Plantation Berhad employs approximately 24,800 migrant workers, who represent 63% of their workers on the ground in Malaysia, according to CBP.

CBP issued 13 orders aimed at forced labor practices last fiscal year, ending in September 2020.

At the end of November, CBP announced it would detain shipments containing cotton and cotton products originating from a major cotton producer in China's western Xinjiang region because of forced labor concerns.

The US has had a prohibition on the import of goods produced using forced labor since the early 1930s, but enforcement was extremely sparse. A 2016 change in the law that ended exceptions, along with increased awareness and a push by then-CBP Commissioner Gil Kerlikowske spurred the agency to use its authorities more aggressively, agency officials previously told CNN.

During the Trump administration, the agency has ramped up its efforts in this area.

"One thing that we sometimes get asked is, 'Is this going to go away with the change of administration?', and I would have to say that this is an issue that is cross cutting and is very bipartisan," said Hinojosa.

Although CBP has not yet had a deep-dive with the Biden transition team on the forced-labor issues, Hinojosa predicted this would remain a priority for the agency.

"You'll be seeing a lot more of this in the coming months and years," she said.

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