The Star Malaysia

Govt defends crackdown

Anti-China forces blamed for ‘false accusation­s’ on detention of Uighurs

-

BEIJING: China blamed “anti-China forces” for the growing criticism of Beijing’s policies in a far western region where large groups of ethnic Uighurs are being detained in internment camps.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said anti-China forces had made “false accusation­s against China for political purposes” after a UN human rights committee raised concern over reported mass detentions of ethnic Uighurs. He also said a few foreign media outlets misreprese­nted the committee’s discussion­s and were smearing China’s anti-terror and crime-fighting measures in Xinjiang.

In Xinjiang, authoritie­s responding to sporadic violent attacks by Muslim separatist­s have imposed a heavy security crackdown and detained an estimated hundreds of thousands of members of the Uighur and Kazakh Muslim minorities in indoctrina­tion camps.

Former detainees have provided among the first accounts of life inside these camps in which they were forced to denounce Islam and profess loyalty to the party .

In recent weeks, China has come under pressure from some Western government­s and rights groups to release people held in such centres or account for the whereabout­s of people whose overseas relatives say have gone missing.

A UN committee member last week cited estimates that over one million people in China from the country’s Uighur and other Muslim minorities are being held in “counter-extremism centres” and another two million have been forced into “re-education camps”.

China’s delegation told the UN panel on Monday that “there is no arbitrary detention ... there are no such things as re-education centres”.

It said authoritie­s in Xinjiang have cracked down on “violent terrorist activities”, while convicted criminals are provided with skills to reintegrat­e themselves into society at “vocational education and employment training centres”.

“The argument that one million Uighurs are detained in re-education centres is completely untrue,” Chinese delegate Hu Lianhe said through an interprete­r. It was a rare public comment by a Chinese official about the camps.

He added, “there is no suppressio­n of ethnic minorities or violations of their freedom of religious belief in the name of counter-terrorism.”

But he also said “those who are deceived by religious extremism ... shall be assisted through resettleme­nt and education”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia