Chinese shoemakers to file suit against EU
(Xinhua) Updated: 2006-10-10 15:52 Chinese shoemakers plan to
file a suit against the European Union (EU) contesting the legal and factual
basis of the anti-dumping measures the EU has just taken against them.
"We have retained our attorney and will file a suit with the European Court
of Justice," said sources with Aokang Group, a shoemaker based in coastal
Wenzhou city of Zhejiang Province.
"We will fight to the end to safeguard our rights by following international
rules." But analysts say it is hard to predict what ruling the European Court
will hand down.
The EU adopted a new policy on October 5 reducing the normal 5-year
anti-dumping term to two years and imposing anti-dumping duties of 16.5 percent
on Chinese shoemakers.
The Ministry of Commerce told Xinhua on Monday the EU decision to impose
anti-dumping duties on China-made leather shoes contradicted the principle of
free and fair trade advocated by the World Trade Organization.
Wu Zhenchang, chairman of Chuangxin Shoemaking Company in Panyu in south
China's Guangdong Province and sponsor of a union of Chinese shoe producers
fighting EU anti-dumping measures, said more than 70 percent of shoe-related
orders will probably shift to southeast Asia in the next two years because no
European dealers will put up with the newly-imposed tariff.
"Chinese shoe makers will become uncompetitive because European shoe dealers
will develop alternative sources of supply in two years," said Wu.
According to EU figures, China exported 1.25 billion pairs of shoes to Europe
in 2005 and holds 50 percent of the European market.
The Chinese figures show that China exported 700 million pairs of shoes to
Europe in 2004.
Wu Chunyue, general manager of Aokang Group, estimated that China's exports
of shoes to the EU will plummet by 40 percent in two years.
China has lodged complaints related to anti-dumping issues with the European
Court in the past but only one complaint was upheld.
Experts propose that the issue be submitted to the WTO if China believes the
EU anti-dumping measures violate WTO principles.
(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)
|