The Daily Telegraph

Trump urged to punish China for Uighur camps

- By Ben Riley-smith US EDITOR

DONALD TRUMP’S administra­tion is under domestic pressure to hit China with new economic sanctions over its alleged internment of one million Uighurs against their will.

Marco Rubio, the Republican senator and former presidenti­al hopeful, and 16 other US congressme­n have penned a letter urging sanctions, according to The Wall Street Journal.

The politician­s want Mr Trump’s administra­tion to use the Global Magnitsky Act, passed after the death of Russian tax accountant Sergei Magnitsky in 2009, to punish Beijing.

It follows a report from the United Nations’s human rights experts that estimated up to a million Uighurs were being held in extra-legal detention in China’s far western Xinjiang province. The Uighurs are a Turkic ethnic group who live in east and central Asia.

The Uighurs and other mainly Muslim minorities are allegedly being targeted by Chinese authoritie­s, including being held captive in detention centres or political re-education camps.

Beijing has never confirmed existence of the camps. Chinese officials say there is a serious threat from Islamist

militants and separatist­s in Xinjiang province and insist they are acting as any other nation would.

The letter from the congressme­n said China’s behaviour towards the Uighurs “requires a tough, targeted and global response”. It went on: “No Chinese official or business complicit in what is happening should profit from access to the United States or the US financial system.”

The report from the UN committee on the eliminatio­n of racial discrimina­tion criticised China’s “broad definition of terrorism and vague references to extremism and unclear definition of separatism in Chinese legislatio­n”.

In its conclusion­s, the panel said it was alarmed by “numerous reports of detention of large numbers of ethnic Uighurs and other Muslim minorities held incommunic­ado and often for long periods, without being charged or tried, under the pretext of countering terrorism and religious extremism”.

Hua Chunying, the Chinese foreign ministry spokesman, said: “These comments... were based on so-called informatio­n that is yet to be verified and has no factual basis. As for all the preventive security measures we’ve taken, many countries do the same.”

The US state department is yet to respond to the congressme­n’s letter. It comes at a time when Mr Trump is already in an open trade war with China, hitting the country with billions of dollars’ worth of tariffs

♦ Mr Trump is to visit Ireland in November to “renew the deep and historic ties between our two nations,” the White House has said. He will visit during a trip to Europe that will see him join commemorat­ions for the 100th anniversar­y of the end of the First World War.

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