About 200 pairs of shoes imported from the European Union have been burned in
Hangzhou, eastern China province of Zhejiang, after the local market watchdog said they had failed
quality checks.
The amount of shoes destroyed made up nearly 70 percent
of the shoe imports inspected by the Zhejiang Industrial and Commercial
Administration in the third quarter. However, no figures detailing the total
number of EU shoes imported to China were released.
The largest ever
campaign to recover substandard shoes from the market, involving well-known
brand names Strada, Clarks, D&G, Trussardi and Boomerang, appears to
coincide with local shoe manufacturers bearing the first brunt of the anti-dumping tariffs imposed by the European Union on Chinese shoe
exports.
Zhejiang, a major shoe production base in China, saw its EU
exports plummet to a record low for the year of 180 million pairs in October,
down 66.4 percent over the same period of last year.
The anti-dumping
duty of 16.5 percent imposed by the EU on October 7 will be in place for two
years.
Pan Wei, who is in charge of a consumer complaints hotline in
Zhejiang, said many of the products failed quality inspections of the stiffness
of the insoles and the rigidity of the uppers.
"By wearing footwear with
these flaws, consumers are more susceptible to falling or spraining their
ankles," Pan said.
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