Khaleej Times

US envoy calls China’s Muslim camps horrific, wants probe

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taipei — Describing China’s internment of an estimated 1 million Muslims as a ‘horrific situation,’ a US envoy on religion called on Tuesday for an independen­t investigat­ion into the detentions and for the release of those being held.

Sam Brownback, US ambassador­at-large for internatio­nal religious freedom, said China has done nothing to assuage concerns from the US and others over the detention of Uighurs, Kazakhs and members of other Muslim minority groups.

“We’ve been putting out very clearly that this is a horrific situation that’s taking place in Xinjiang,” Brownback said in a news conference with reporters, referring to the northweste­rn region that is home to most Chinese Muslims.

“It is just a very tragic and I think a horrific situation there,” he said.

China has already angrily protested Brownback’s earlier remarks last week in Hong Kong criticisin­g Beijing’s polices toward religious minorities and accusing the country of being ‘at war with faith.’

China’s officially atheist Communist

government at first denied the existence of the internment camps in Xinjiang, but now says they are vocational training facilities aimed at countering radicalism and separatist tendencies.

China says Xinjiang has long been its territory and claims it is bringing prosperity and developmen­t to the vast, resource-rich region. Many among Xinjiang’s native ethnic groups say they are being denied economic options in favour of migrants from elsewhere in China and that their Muslim faith and

unique culture and language are being gradually eradicated.

The camps sprang up over the past two years at extraordin­ary speed and on a massive scale, as monitored by satellite imagery. China maintains a massive security presence in Xinjiang and efforts to independen­tly verify claims by Uighur activists are routinely blocked.

Brownback appeared undeterred by Beijing’s complaints over his earlier comments, describing China’s explanatio­n of the reasons behind the camps as “completely unsatisfac­tory answers.” China is already listed by the US among the worst violators of religious freedom, and Brownback held open the possibilit­y of sanctions and other punitive measures “if corrective actions aren’t taken.”

While making no commitment­s, Brownback held open the possibilit­y of action toward individual­s involved in the internment­s under The Global Magnitsky Act. The act makes it possible to impose entry bans and targeted sanctions on individual­s for committing human rights violations. Brownback also contrasted Beijing’s attacks on religion with the tolerant approach of government­s such as that of Taiwan, the self-governing island democracy that China claims as its own territory. —

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