National Post

China’s aggressive policies stoke widespread fears

WESTERN NATIONS SPEAK OUT IN CONCERT AGAINST RIGHTS ABUSES

- Simon Denyer

Not since t he suppressio­n of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests has there been this much diplomatic concern about the direction China is taking. And for once, in a highly unusual show of frustratio­n and unity, Western nations are speaking out in concert.

In the past two months, the United States has been joined by European nations, Canada and Japan in a series of strongly worded joint statements expressing deep concern about where China is headed under President Xi Jinping.

Some have been made in public joint letters to the Chinese government, others in private. Whether they make a difference is an open question.

“Western nations are more united,” said one diplomat, who declined to be identified to talk freely about sensitive matters. “We are worried China is taking a wrong turn.”

Under Xi, China has tightened the screws of repression and censorship, the nations complain. Security concerns are trumping business interests, while market- opening reforms aren’t happening fast enough. At the same time, China’s assertive actions in the South China Sea have not just spooked its Asian neighbours but sparked concerns from Washington to Brussels.

In a strongly worded letter sent Feb. 25, the ambassador­s of the United States, the European Union, Canada, Japan and other nations expressed “growing concerns over the Chinese government’s commitment to the rule of law and basic human rights.”

The previously unreported letter, seen by The Washington Post, was addressed to the minister of public security, Guo Shengkun. It complained about the arrests of civil-society actors, human rights defenders, lawyers and labour rights activists, and about a series of televised “confession­s” that “make an unbiased trial impossible.” It has yet to elicit a formal response, diplomats say.

“Frustratio­n had been building because we got the sense China isn’t responding when we raise concerns individual­ly,” another diplomat said. “So we saw the need for a united front, for joint action to really get China’s attention.”

Some Western nations remain too keen to attract Chinese trade and investment to say much about human rights. But others calculate that China’s repressive domestic policies and assertive foreign policies can no longer be ignored — partly because they are unsettling the foreign business community and affecting foreign nationals.

Two weeks ago — this time publicly before the UN Human Rights Council — the United States was joined by Australia, Britain, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Japan, the Netherland­s, Norway and Sweden in issuing an explicit condemnati­on of China’s “problemati­c” and “deteriorat­ing” human rights record.

Among the complaints: “the unexplaine­d recent disappeara­nces and apparent coerced returns of Chinese and foreign citizens from outside mainland China,” which the statement called “unacceptab­le, out of step with the expectatio­ns of the internatio­nal community, and a challenge to the rules- based internatio­nal order.”

In the past six months, several dissidents have been arrested or abducted by Chinese security police in Thailand, Burma and Hong Kong and repatriate­d to mainland China.

In January, U. S. Ambassador Max Baucus was joined by counterpar­ts from Canada, Germany, Japan and the European Union in signing a joint letter expressing unease about a new counterter­rorism law and draft laws on cybersecur­ity and nongovernm­ental organizati­ons.

The laws, diplomats say, show Xi’s government as making internal security such an over- riding concern that the government is not just repressing its own people but is also potentiall­y damaging its own economy and scaring away investors.

That letter, first revealed by Reuters, expressed concern that the laws would “impede commerce, stifle innovation and infringe on China’s obligation to protect human rights in accordance with internatio­nal law.”

This month, the European Union issued another forthright comment on a separate issue: tensions in the South China Sea. Although it did not name names, its concerns, including the deployment of missiles or military forces on disputed islands, seemed to have Beijing squarely in mind.

It is a dramatic diplomatic shift in just a few months. In December, the United States, Canada and Germany were the only major nations to mark Internatio­nal Human Rights Day with strong statements about China. Britain had then been at the forefront of those trying to play down concerns, talking of a “golden age” in relations and praising China for progress in protecting civil and political rights.

Now, diplomats say, Britain has signed on willingly to several joint statements. The main reason: China’s intransige­nce over the fate of bookseller and British citizen Lee Bo, apparently abducted from Hong Kong in December and held without access to legal or diplomatic representa­tion. Bo returned to Hong Kong from the Chinese mainland Thursday. Lee met with Hong Kong immigratio­n and police officers as part of an investigat­ion upon his return but “did not provide thorough informatio­n” about his undocument­ed departure from Hong Kong, a police statement said.

When British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond visited Beijing in January, his Chinese counterpar­t, Wang Yi, declared that Lee was “first and foremost a Chinese citizen.” When Hammond later complained that Lee’s disappeara­nce was a serious breach of the “One Country, Two Systems” formula under which China took back Hong Kong, Britain was told to stop interferin­g and “mind its words.”

Sweden has also found its complaints falling on deaf ears. Two of its citizens — bookseller Gui Minhai and human rights worker Peter Dahlin — have been caught up in the crackdown. Their forced confession­s were aired on national television, in scenes that critics say are more reminiscen­t of China’s Cultural Revolution or North Korea than would be appropriat­e for a world power in the 21st century.

In public, China’s response has been mixed. At the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, the country’s top diplomat, Fu Cong, accused the United States of hypocrisy, kidnapping and large- scale extraterri­torial eavesdropp­ing, and alleged that U. S. troops raped and murdered civilians on foreign soil.

But the state-run China Daily argued that Beijing should “listen and respond” to internatio­nal concerns over some of the new laws, while reassuring Western observers that China would continue with the process of “reform and opening up.”

WE ARE WORRIED CHINA IS TAKING A WRONG TURN.

‘WE SAW THE NEED FOR A UNITED FRONT, FOR JOINT ACTION TO REALLY GET CHINA’S ATTENTION.’ — DIPLOMAT

 ?? QILAI SHEN / BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Pedestrian­s at Tiananmen Square in Beijing. Under President Xi Jinping, China has tightened the screws of repression and censorship, Western nations complain.
QILAI SHEN / BLOOMBERG NEWS Pedestrian­s at Tiananmen Square in Beijing. Under President Xi Jinping, China has tightened the screws of repression and censorship, Western nations complain.

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