Alien Tort Statute and Cisco case: Court of Appeal allows proceedings to continue

On July 7, 2023, the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled that proceedings against Cisco System under the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) can proceed. In this decade long trial, practitioners of Falun Gong – a Chinese religious movement – alleged that they or family members were victims of human rights abuses including torture, arbitrary detention, forced labour, extrajudicial killing and forced disappearance committed by the Chinese Communist Party and Chinese government officials. According to the claimants, the alleged abuses were enabled by technological assistance of Cisco System, a US company which designed, implemented and helped to maintain a surveillance and internal security network (the Golden Shield system) for Chinese officials, greatly enhancing their capacity to identify Falun Gong practitioners and persecute them. In 2011, claimants sued Cisco for aiding and abetting Chinese officials in violation of the ATS.

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Trump administration against corporate liability for human rights violations under Alien Tort Statute

On May 26, 2020, the Trump administration filed a brief amicus curiae in the Cargill Inc. v John Doe case, urging the Supreme Court to hold that domestic corporations cannot be liable for human rights violations under the Alien Tort Statute (ATS).

In this case, former child slaves who were forced to work on cocoa farms in the Ivory Coast claim that Nestle US and Cargill aided and abetted slave labour by providing financial support and technical farming aid to famers, subjecting defendants to suit under the ATS.

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