Heading: |
Minerals: Xinjiang |
Question ID: |
1811668 |
UIN: |
59026 |
House: |
Commons |
Date tabled: |
2025-06-11 |
Asking Member ID: |
4403 |
Asking Member display name: |
Chris Law
|
Asking Member handle: |
chrislawsnp
|
Asking Member Twitter reference: |
@chrislawsnp
|
Member interest: |
false |
Question text: |
To ask the Secretary of State for Business and Trade, what assessment his Department has made of the potential implications for its policies of the Global Rights Compliance report entitled Risk at the Source: Critical Mineral Supply Chains and State-Impos |
Is named day: |
false |
Date of holding answer: |
|
Date answered: |
2025-06-17 |
Date answer corrected: |
|
Is holding answer: |
false |
Is correcting answer: |
false |
Answering Member ID: |
632 |
Answering Member display name: |
Mr Douglas Alexander
|
Answering Member handle: |
D_G_Alexander
|
Answering Member Twitter reference: |
@D_G_Alexander
|
Correcting Member ID: |
|
Correcting Member display name: |
|
Correcting Member handle: |
|
Correcting Member Twitter reference: |
|
Answer text: |
This government will continue to speak up on human rights in China, including the repression of people in Xinjiang, and will continue to hold China to account.The new Critical Minerals Strategy will help secure the supply of critical minerals vital for th... |
Original answer text: |
|
Comparable answer text: |
|
Answering body ID: |
214 |
Answering body name: |
Department for Business and Trade |
Tweeted: |
true |