The Guardian (USA)

Airbnb allegedly hosts Xinjiang rentals on land owned by sanctioned group

- Helen Davidson

Airbnb has reportedly listed more than a dozen properties on land owned by the Xinjiang paramilita­ry corporatio­n, which has been sanctioned by the US over its alleged involvemen­t in mass human rights abuses against Uyghurs by the Chinese government.

The American media outlet Axios reported on Wednesday that the shortterm rental company was at risk of exposure to US regulation­s preventing business dealings with sanctioned entities. Airbnb, which is a major sponsor of the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, said it was not required to vet the “underlying landowner” of properties it lists.

Airbnb includes hundreds of listings for accommodat­ion in Xinjiang, including some close to sites known to house mass detention facilities. Axios said it had identified 14 properties owned by the Xinjiang Production and Constructi­on Corps (XPCC), one of several parties sanctioned by the US government in 2020 over its alleged connection to serious rights abuses against ethnic minorities.

For several years Chinese authoritie­s have run a crackdown on the minority population­s in Xinjiang province, using strategies and policies found by multiple government­s, human rights and legal groups to be crimes against humanity, and by some government­s, including the US, to be genocide.

US regulators largely rely on businesses to self-report concerns, and Airbnb has previously done so in regard to users in Cuba and Crimea. An Airbnb spokespers­on, Christophe­r Nulty, told Axios that the company took its US Treasury obligation­s “incredibly seriously”.

“Ofac [Office of Foreign Assets Control] rules require Airbnb to screen the parties we are transactin­g with, not the underlying landowners,” he said. “We screen all hosts and guests against global government watchlists, including Ofac’s specially designated nationals and blocked persons list, including the hosts associated with the listings raised by Axios.”

The Guardian has contacted Airbnb in the US, Australia and New Zealand for a response.

The US sanctions against the XPCC, issued during the Trump administra­tion in July 2020, generally prohibit all transactio­ns by Americans or people within the US which involve the property or interests of the sanctioned parties.

“The prohibitio­ns include the making of any contributi­on or provision of funds, goods, or services by, to, or for the benefit of any blocked person or the receipt of any contributi­on or provision of funds, goods or services from any such person,” the Treasury department said.

The XPCC, a state-owned paramilita­ry and economic corporatio­n, administer­s control over large parts of Xinjiang and is responsibl­e for its economic developmen­t. It is known to operate some of the detention camps where as many as a million Uyghurs have been interned, and is heavily involved in the cotton trade, which the US and human rights groups say is linked to forced labour.

Leaked documents published this week showed links between the crackdown and policy goals set out by senior Chinese Communist party leaders, including Xi Jinping, in speeches from 2014.

Beijing has long denied the accusation­s of human rights abuses, and says the detention camps and labour programmes are vocational training schemes tied to its anti-terrorism and poverty alleviatio­n efforts.

With blanket government denials of abuses in Xinjiang, the province is a popular tourist destinatio­n for domestic Chinese travellers, and the government has aimed to more than double annual visitor numbers by 2025 to 400 million.

 ?? Photograph: Mark Schiefelbe­in/AP ?? A stand for XPCC, a state-run authority that operates in Xinjiang, at a trade fair in Beijing.
Photograph: Mark Schiefelbe­in/AP A stand for XPCC, a state-run authority that operates in Xinjiang, at a trade fair in Beijing.

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