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US trade office under Trump adds Amazon to 'notorious markets' list

The United States for the first time added five of Amazon's overseas operations to its list of "notorious markets" where pirated goods are sold.

US trade office under Trump adds Amazon to 'notorious markets' list

Thursday April 30, 2020 , 2 min Read

The United States for the first time added five of Amazon's overseas operations to its list of "notorious markets" where pirated goods are sold. The ecommerce giant dismissed the move as part of the Trump administration's "personal vendetta" against it.


The Office of the US Trade Representative on Wednesday added the Amazon.com Inc. domains in Canada, France, Germany, India and the United Kingdom to its annual blacklist.
Amazon-delivery



USTR cited complaints from US businesses that consumers can't easily tell who is selling items on the Amazon platforms and that the ecommerce company's "procedures for removing counterfeit goods can be lengthy and burdensome.''


Amazon fired back with a statement Wednesday: "We strongly disagree with the characterisation of Amazon in this USTR report. This purely political act is another example of the administration using the US government to advance a personal vendetta against Amazon.''


The Seattle-based company said it has taken aggressive steps to combat counterfeiting.


President Donald Trump has clashed repeatedly with Amazon. The company's Founder, Jeff Bezos, also owns The Washington Post newspaper, which has written critical stories about Trump and his business dealings.


Amazon sued the US Defense Department last year after losing a lucrative cloud computing contract to rival Microsoft. Trump has also said he won't approve a $10 billion loan to the US Postal Service unless it dramatically increases the rates it charges Amazon and other big shipping companies.


Last October, the American Apparel & Footwear Association urged the trade representative to add Amazon operations in those five countries to the 'notorious markets' list. The association praised the trade office's decision in a statement Wednesday but did not mention Amazon.


Chinese ecommerce colosses Alibaba Group's Taobao.com online marketplace also remained on the list.


USTR also said Wednesday that Algeria, Argentina, Chile, China, India, Indonesia, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Ukraine, and Venezuela remained on its priority watch list of countries that do not adequately protect intellectual property. It removed Kuwait from the priority list, saying the country is updating its intellectual property laws and stepping up enforcement against piracy.