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Home >> Business
UPDATED: 08:19, December 15, 2006
China's largest private shoemaker files lawsuit against EU anti-dumping duties
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China's largest privately owned shoemaker Aokang Group announced on Thursday that it will officially lodge a lawsuit against the European Union's anti-dumping tariffs within one week.

Company officials said Aokang's petition has already been sent to its European lawyers, who would formally deliver it to the EU Court of First Instance before Dec. 20.

Aokang Group is the first Chinese shoemaker to begin proceedings less than three weeks after the EU imposed two-year anti-dumping duties of 16.5 percent on leather shoes made in China on Oct. 7.

"We were left with no other choice but to file a lawsuit", said Wang Zhentao, President of Aokang.

Based in Wenzhou, in east China's Zhejiang Province, Aokang Group produced 13 million pairs of leather shoes last year and exported three million.

The company's lawyer Pu Lingchen said the duties violated the EU's regulations on anti-dumping.

Pu, widely regarded as China's top anti-dumping lawyer, said the regulations prescribed that the EU should review the market economy status of all the companies involved.

"The EU only reviewed ten Chinese shoemakers, " Pu said, "Quite contrary to the common practice, it didn't send Aokang any written explanations on why they failed to include the company on the list of companies to be reviewed."

Many insiders believe this kind of case may last two to four years and cost up to two million yuan (255,750 U.S. dollars).

As a result, 300 shoemakers in southeastern Fujian Province have abandoned their planned lawsuit and only four out of the 1,200-plus affected Chinese shoemakers are still continuing with their proceedings.

But Wang is still confident of winning the case.

"No matter how complicated the legal procedures are and how tough our task is, we believe in justice," he said in late October.

Chong Quan, spokesman with the Ministry of Commerce, has said that the EU's anti-dumping measures against Chinese leather shoe imports lacked "sufficient and factual evidence".

Su Chaoying, deputy director of China Leather Association, said "the lawsuit will help Chinese shoemakers win more support from shoe retailers and importers in the EU when the anti-dumping case is reviewed in 2008."

Source: Xinhua


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