Deutsche Welle (English edition)

EU agrees China sanctions over human rights abuses

EU ambassador­s have agreed on a list of persons and entities to be sanctioned for human rights abuses, including ones committed against China's Uighur minority.

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The European Union's 27 ambassador­s a g re e d on Wednesday to impose new sanctions on individual­s from China and other countries over human rights abuses, two EU diplomats have said.

They will be the first sanctions against Beijing since an EU arms embargo in 1989 following the Tiananmen Square crackdown. The embargo is still in place.

China is the EU's second-largest trading partner.

The bloc's foreign ministers are expected to formally approve the sanctions on Monday.

Who is on the list?

The ambassador­s have assembled a list of 11 names

of individual­s and entities to be hit by travel bans and asset freezes. It includes four Chinese officials and one entity accused of human rights abuses against China's Uighur Muslim minority,

but will not be published until formal approval is given, EU diplomats said.

The lists also include officials from Russia, Libya, South Sudan and North Korea, diplomats said.

The agreement on sanctions comes after a planned visit by EU ambassador­s to China's Xinjiang region, where the Uighurs largely live, was refused permission over a request to see jailed

Uighur academic Ilham Tohti.

Tohti, an economist who received the EU's top human rights award, the Sakharov Prize, in 2019, was imprisoned for life on separatism charges in 2014.

Why has China so far not approved the visit?

China's ambassador to the EU, Zhang Ming, said on Tuesday that "almost everything had been arranged" for the ambassador­s' visit but that "unacceptab­le requests" had led to snags. "They insist on a meeting with one criminal convicted by Chinese law," he said. "This is unacceptab­le; I'm so sorry."

China strongly denies allegation­s that it has been repressing and mistreatin­g Uighurs in Xinjiang, among other things by incarcerat­ing them in "reeducatio­n centers" that have been compared with prison camps.

 ??  ?? Many thousands of Uighurs are believed to be imprisoned in 're-education centers' like this
Many thousands of Uighurs are believed to be imprisoned in 're-education centers' like this

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