For the first time since laws prohibiting the import of products believed to have been manufactured by slave labour were established in 2020, a shipment of goods from China has been seized by Canada.  The ban was put in place by the trilateral USMCA trade deal signed by Canada in 2018, although the prohibition did not go into force until July 2020.  Following inquiries from The Globe and Mail, the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) confirmed on Nov. 12 that it has made only one interception since mid-2020.  A CBSA spokesperson told the Globe that customs officials seized a shipment of clothing arriving in Quebec from China they believed was “manufactured or produced wholly or in part by forced labour.”  The agency did not disclose the date of the seizure, citing confidentiality rules that prevent them from identifying the importer. On Jan. 12, Canada and the UK announced a set …