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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Girl finds plea for help in her Christmas card, family says

By Hannah Knowles Washington Post

A British retailer with thousands of stores around the world said Sunday it has suspended work with a Chinese factory as it investigates allegations of forced labor behind its Christmas cards – spurred by a plea for help that a 6-year-old girl reportedly found scrawled in her family’s purchase.

Supermarket chain Tesco said it has also stopped selling the cards after the Sunday Times described an all-caps note, attributed to Chinese prisoners, that urges its reader to contact a human rights group. The report follows years of other notes allegedly penned by abused workers, raising concerns among unsuspecting shoppers and prompting inquiries.

Tesco said in a statement it was stunned by the accusations of forced labor and would cut ties with the cards’ supplier if it was found to have violated Tesco’s rules against prison labor. The company said it has a “comprehensive auditing system,” adding the cards’ supplier “was independently audited as recently as last month” and that no evidence of wrongdoing surfaced.

The supplier, Zheijiang Yunguang Printing, did not immediately respond to the Washington Post on Sunday, nor did the Chinese Embassy.

The upheaval started with a holiday purchase that supports Tesco’s charity, a London family said in an interview posted by the BBC. Florence Widdicombe was looking through the cards her mother picked up – she wanted to write to her friends at school – when she starting laughing, her father said.

“Mom, look – somebody’s already written in this card,” Ben Widdicombe recounted his daughter saying to his wife.

A closer look revealed a note claiming to be from foreign inmates in China’s Qingpu prison “forced to work against our will,” he said. The note reportedly asked the reader to contact a “Mr Peter Humphrey” – a British journalist and former private investigator who spent about two years in the prison and who would bring the allegations of mistreatment into the public eye this weekend with a Sunday Times article.

At first, Ben Widdicombe said, he suspected a prank.

“But on reflection, we realized it was actually potentially quite a serious thing,” he said.

He messaged Humphrey via LinkedIn on Monday, the journalist recounted.

The Post could not independently confirm the Widdicombes’ account, but the report raises serious questions about the festive cards that Tesco says allow it to donate hundreds of thousands of dollars each year to charitable causes in Britain.

Humphrey said he believes the note was written by ex-cellmates whom he met after his corporate fraud investigations drew the ire of the Chinese government, landing him and his wife in prison on “bogus charges that were never heard in court.” He said he reached out to other former inmates, who confirmed people in his old unit have been forced to do assembly and packaging.

Foreign prisoners in Qingpu have been working on Tesco Christmas cards and gift tags for at least two years, Humphrey says he was told.

“I’m pretty sure this was written as a collective message,” Humphrey told the BBC of the note Ben Widdicombe passed on to him. “Obviously one single hand produced this capital letters’ handwriting and I think I know who it was, but I will never disclose that name.”

Notes alleging worker abuse in China have shocked consumers before. In 2013, The New York Times reported, a former prisoner whose story led to a documentary claimed responsibility for a letter found by an Oregon mother in Halloween decorations from Kmart. The Beijing man said he’d stuffed 20 letters into items bound for the West over his years in a labor camp.