More than 150 Chinese shoemakers have formed an alliance against the European 
Union's anti-dumping duties and jointly raised 3 million yuan (US$375,000). 
The European Commission announced last week that it would impose anti-dumping 
duties on leather shoes from China and Vietnam, despite only three countries 
voting in favor of the duties, 10 against and 11 abstaining. 
The duties on Chinese shoes will start at 4 percent from Friday and rise to 
19.4 percent in the following six months. 
However, children's shoes and high-tech sports shoes will be excluded from 
the tariffs. 
China has rejected the duties as unjustified and a violation of free trade. 
Though the duties will be tentative, it is very possible that they may last 
for five years, Wu Zhenchang, president of Panyu Chuangxin Shoes Group in south 
China's Guangdong Province, told Xinhua. 
Wu said in today's highly globalized international market, the 19.4 percent 
anti-dumping duties will not only drag China's shoemakers down but also drive 
customers to the nation's competitors. 
"The high duties will snatch the order forms of the European importers from 
China's shoemakers and thrust them into the hands of those in Thailand and 
Malaysia and in the long term, Eastern European and Indian shoemakers will also 
become strong rivals," Wu said. 
Fighting for legal interests of their own, more than 150 shoemakers in China 
formed the alliance and selected 15 member companies to form an executive 
committee to fight further against the anti-dumping move. 
The alliance said it disagrees with the EC's decision to treat Chinese 
shoemakers as state-nurtured companies and not as freely competing market 
players, and the conclusion that the EU's footwear industry has suffered losses 
due to imports of Chinese footwear.