The Borneo Post

China faces grilling over internment camps at UN human rights review

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BEIJING: China will be grilled over its mass detainment of Uighur minorities during a UN human rights review tomorrow, with Washington leading demands for Beijing to come clean on how many people are held in a sprawling network of camps.

As many as one million ethnic Uighurs and other Muslim minorities are being kept in extrajudic­ial detention in China’s fractious far western Xinjiang region, according to estimates cited by a UN panel.

The centres where they are thought to be detained have come under increasing scrutiny this year, with rights activists describing them as political re- education camps. They say members of China’s Muslim minorities are held involuntar­ily for transgress­ions such as wearing long beards and face veils.

“The Human Rights Council must send an unequivoca­l message to the Chinese government that their campaign of systematic repression in the Xinjiang Autonomous Region, including the arbitrary detention of up to one million people, must end,” said Patrick Poon, China researcher at Amnesty Internatio­nal.

All 193 United Nations member states must undergo a periodic review by the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.

China will present a report on its domestic human rights situation and on changes made since its last report in 2013, while diplomats from around the world will have the opportunit­y to ask questions – some of which have already been submitted.

One question by the US – which is leading demands for Beijing to come clean on the crackdown – says: “Can China clarify the basis for its apparent criminalis­ation of peaceful religious practices as justificat­ion to detain people in these political ‘ re- education’ camps in Xinjiang, as well as which officials are responsibl­e for this policy?”

Washington also wants Beijing to provide “the number of people involuntar­ily held in all detention facilities in Xinjiang during the past five years”. Britain has asked when China will implement a UN racial discrimina­tion panel’s recommenda­tion that it “halt the practice of detaining individual­s who have not been lawfully charged, tried, and convicted for a criminal offence in any extralegal detention facilities”.

The US and Germany have requested UN access to Xinjiang and Tibet to investigat­e allegation­s of mass detention and restrictio­ns on religious freedoms.

Beijing previously denied the existence of such camps, but now defends them as ‘vocational education and training centres’ where happy students study Mandarin, brush up on job skills, and pursue hobbies such as sports and folk dance.

Chinese officials say the facilities are part of efforts to combat terrorism, religious extremism and separatism in Xinjiang following unrest that left hundreds dead in recent years.

But an AFP investigat­ion published in October showed that local authoritie­s had bought gear for the centres including police batons, electric cattle prods, handcuffs, pepper spray, stun guns and razor wire.

The centres should “teach like a school, be managed like the military, and be defended like a prison”, said one official document, quoting Xinjiang’s party secretary Chen Quanguo.

“The Chinese government owes some answers to internatio­nal questions about Xinjiang,” Maya Wang, senior researcher at Human Rights Watch, told AFP.

The UN human rights review is a chance for countries to ‘ focus their firepower on Xinjiang’, though its effectiven­ess will depend on “whether or not there is commitment from the states to push for accountabi­lity,” she added. — AFP

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