The Asian Age

China hits out at criticism over HK, Xinjiang and Tibet

- —

THE MOVE came as Beijing also hit out at Washington for appointing a new special coordinato­r for Tibet and blasted global powers over their criticism of local elections in Hong Kong that vetted out the opposition.

Beijing Dec. 21: China blackliste­d four members of a US federal commission on religious freedom on Tuesday in the latest tit-for-tat response to Washington’s own sanctions targeting alleged perpetrato­rs of “genocide” in Xinjiang.

The move came as Beijing also hit out at Washington for appointing a new special coordinato­r for Tibet and blasted global powers over their criticism of local elections in Hong Kong that vetted out the opposition.

China’s treatment of Tibetans, Muslim minority Uighurs in Xinjiang and an ongoing crackdown on dissent in Hong Kong have contribute­d to worsening diplomatic relations between Western powers and Beijing.

Xinjiang in particular has prompted Washington to slap sanctions on a growing list of Chinese politician­s and companies as well as a diplomatic boycott of the upcoming Winter Olympics, sparking fury in Beijing and reciprocal measures.

On Tuesday China announced the latest targets — four members of the United States Commission on Internatio­nal Religious Freedom (USCIRF).

Beijing’s foreign ministry named chairwoman Nadine Maenza, vice chairman Nury Turkel, as well as commission­ers Anurima Bhargava and James W. Carr as newly sanctioned.

“These countermea­sures include the prohibitio­n of the above-mentioned persons from entering China and the freezing of their assets in Mainland

China, Hong Kong and Macau,” spokesman Zhao Lijian told reporters.

“Chinese citizens and institutio­ns are also prohibited from dealing with these people.”Set up in 1998, USCIRF is a federal commission that surveys religious freedom around the world and has been a vocal critic of China's treatment of Uighur Muslims, a rare bipartisan issue in polarised Washington.

The announceme­nt came days after the US unleashed a volley of new actions over Xinjiang that included a ban on virtually all imports from the region — a major global cotton producer — over forced labour allegation­s.

It has also recently blackliste­d Chinese companies like drone maker DJI and artificial intelligen­ce startup SenseTime over their alleged work with authoritie­s in Xinjiang. China’s previous reciprocal sanctions have included European, British and US lawmakers, academics who study Xinjiang and a London law firm. Campaigner­s say that at least one million Uighurs and other Turkic-speaking, mostly Muslim minorities have been incarcerat­ed in camps in China’s Xinjiang region.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India