The case involved an application for judicial review of the decisions of three British government agencies, which had declined to investigate or block cotton imports from China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. The applicant was the World Uyghur Congress (WUC), an NGO that is said to promote the collective interests of the Uyghur people. The WUC sought to challenge decisions by:
In April 2020, the WUC had written to the UK authorities, calling for action in relation to cotton originating in the Uyghur Region within the UK’s supply chain, urging them to investigate and block cotton imports from the Uyghur Region. The WUC provided evidence alleging forced labour in the cotton and textile industries. The evidence submitted alleged links to UK companies. The UK authorities concluded that the evidence was insufficient for them to investigate or block cotton imports. The WUC issued an application for judicial review of those decisions, namely that:
Although the Administrative Court acknowledged that there “are clear and widespread abuses in the cotton industry in the [Uyghur Region], involving human rights violations and exploitations of forced labour” – and that any decision did not seek to undermine evidence of the same, the issue before it was whether the authorities had correctly understood and analysed the legal tools available to them.
The court dismissed the WUC’s application and held that the authorities had not misdirected themselves as to the law or the requirements of the statutes under consideration.
In May 2023, the Court of Appeal gave WUC permission to appeal.
In June 2024, the Court of Appeal gave judgment on the narrow issue of whether the NCA had misdirected itself in law when reaching the decision:
The Court of Appeal was satisfied that the NCA had misdirected itself in law. It had also made a fundamental error in treating the exemption from liability under section 329(2)(c) of POCA as if it had an impact on the status of property as criminal property or recoverable property; as a result, the NCA had misunderstood the consequences of the hypothetical presence within a supply chain of an individual who can rely on that exemption. In the judgment, the Court of Appeal held that the NCA had proceeded “on the basis that:
Accordingly, the question of whether to carry out an investigation under POCA was remitted to the NCA for reconsideration.
Court of Appeal judgment