National Post

UN’s review of human rights policies in China a carnival of lies.

- TERRY GLAVIN

The performanc­e of the United Nations Human Rights Council in subjecting China to one of its periodic reviews in Geneva this week was everything critics have long pointed out about the UN system generally, and the UN’s human rights function specifical­ly. It was a carnival of technocrat­ic surrealism, polite uselessnes­s and outrageous lies.

If that seems a bit harsh, then let’s just say it wasn’t exactly the best advertisem­ent for the rulesbased global order that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Germany’s Angela Merkel, France’s Emmanuel Macron and the rest keep telling us we must defend against creepy anti-globalizat­ion populists like U.S. President Donald Trump and Brazil’s just-elected Jair Bolsonaro. It was a farce.

For more than a year now, there has been mounting, detailed evidence that Beijing has been rounding up hundreds of thousands of harmlessly devout Muslim Uighurs — perhaps a million of them — and forcing them into re-education camps where they are subjected to ritualized humiliatio­n, Communist Party indoctrina­tion, beatings and torture. Investigat­ors with the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights aren’t even allowed to visit the camps.

After having first denied the camps’ mere existence, a few weeks ago China turned to describing dozens of high-security facilities in the eastern province of Xinjiang, all surrounded by locked gates, razor wire and sentry towers, as “vocational training schools.” Xinjiang, a predominan­tly Turkic region, has become increasing­ly overwhelme­d by Han Chinese domination and Beijing’s policestat­e surveillan­ce infrastruc­ture, with military checkpoint­s everywhere, arbitrary arrests and disappeara­nces — all the dirty habits of state terror.

On Tuesday in Geneva, Beijing’s emissaries persisted in a charade of brazen, outright falsehoods. The point of the facilities in Xinjiang is to protect “the human rights of the vast majority,” Le Yucheng, China’s deputy foreign minister, claimed. “It’s another important contributi­on of China’s to the global counterter­ror field.”

On Tuesday, Canada ended up joining with several western countries, including Britain, Germany, France and the United States, in demanding answers and action on the situation in Xinjiang (the U.S. was attending as an observer state, after Trump withdrew from the Human Rights Council in June). Deputy permanent UN representa­tive Tamara Mawhinney said Canada expects China to refrain from “prosecutio­n and persecutio­n on the basis of religion or belief,” and called on Beijing to “release Uighurs and other Muslims who have been detained arbitraril­y and without due process for their ethnicity or religion.”

Well done, then. But when the day began, Canada’s contributi­on stood out not for its candour, but for its weirdness. While most western countries each submitted numerous advance questions on China’s human rights compliance that were fairly elaborate and detailed, touching on China’s multiplyin­g and worsening outrages against several UN human rights charters and covenants, Canada submitted a single, one-sentence question. “What steps is China taking to grant equal marriage and family protection­s to LGBTI couples in its new Civil Code?”

“We were kind of shocked and disappoint­ed that the advance question they asked was only about that,” Patrick Poon, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s China researcher, told me. “In the future they should show more willingnes­s to ask more important questions and raise more issues to make the process more meaningful.”

Speaking by telephone from Hong Kong, Poon told me it was particular­ly dishearten­ing that so many UN member states appeared to take the opportunit­y of China’s five-year periodic review to flatter Beijing, or to pitch comically softball questions, and that not one of the UN’s 50 Muslim-majority countries forcefully challenged Beijing for its persecutio­n of the Muslim Uighurs.

“We were hoping Muslim countries would bring more attention to the situation in Xinjiang,” Poon told me. “Most countries didn’t mention Xinjiang at all. That’s something we need to ask. Why are they so quiet about their Muslim brothers and sisters in Xinjiang?”

Poon reckoned the near silence of the Muslim-majority states, and the prepostero­usly obsequious “questions” fielded by the usual unfree hellholes like Venezuela and Russia, can been explained by China’s ambitiousl­y expansioni­st role in the world and a reluctance to tempt Beijing’s punishment by lost business opportunit­ies. There’s also the awkward matter of statesanct­ioned religious persecutio­n that is commonplac­e in Muslimmajo­rity countries.

But this, too, is awkward. While Canadian diplomats were in Geneva prepping for Tuesday’s opportunit­y to speak for 45 seconds on the subject of Beijing’s utter disregard for the human rights of China’s 1.4 billion people — each UN member state was allotted 45 seconds on Tuesday — several federal cabinet ministers and provincial premiers and assorted senior officials were prepping for a trip to China to talk business. Among them: Finance Minister Bill Morneau, Internatio­nal Trade Diversific­ation Minister Jim Carr, federal Agricultur­e Minister Lawrence McAulay, Treasury Board president Scott Brison, and the premiers of Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador.

It’s business as usual. And that’s how it works in the rules-based global order we are all summoned to champion. This is, shall we say, something of a challenge that is certainly not made any less greasy by the emergence of Xi Jinping as the loudest and most powerful poster boy for an “open global economy that is innovative and inclusive,” as he himself calls it.

Xi’s tributes to the internatio­nal order might well be indistingu­ishable from the sorts of things you will routinely hear from the European Commission’s Jean-Claude Juncker, or even our own Foreign Affairs Minister, Chrystia Freeland. But he is also President of the People’s Republic of China, Communist Party general secretary, chairman of the Central Military Commission, chief of the Central Leading Group for Foreign Affairs, and head of the China’s Central National Security Commission. He is a gargoyle, a kleptocrat, and a thug.

At an internatio­nal gathering of chief executives and trade ministers in Shanghai on Monday, Xi lauded the infrastruc­ture of capitalist globalism, calling for deeper trade liberaliza­tion and global governance. He praised the G20, the Asia Pacific Economic Council and the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on. Xi had especially kind words for the World Trade Organizati­on, urging that its rules be followed assiduousl­y, and that the global multilater­al trading system that the WTO oversees should be firmly defended.

And that’s the contradict­ion at the heart of Canada’s current preoccupat­ion with ingratiati­ng itself with enough UN member states to earn a useless non-voting place at the UN Security Council. It’s the structural flaw in each of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s fervent defences of trade-based multilater­alism and globalized free trade, and to the 70-year global order that is crumbling all around us.

If this is what it has come to, and it’s just business as usual, it’s not worth defending.

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