National Post (National Edition)

China blasts Rae over genocide suggestion

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA • The Chinese government is firing back at Canada’s ambassador to the United Nations for calling on the UN to investigat­e whether China’s persecutio­n of ethnic Muslim Uyghurs in its Xinjiang province is a genocide.

During a news conference in Beijing Monday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian described Bob Rae’s comments as “ridiculous,” adding that Canada itself better fits the descriptio­n of having perpetrate­d a genocide.

Rae told the CBC on Sunday that he has asked the UN Human Rights Council to investigat­e China’s treatment of the country’s Uyghurs in Xinjiang.

Last month, a Canadian parliament­ary subcommitt­ee concluded in a report that China’s treatment of the Uyghurs is a genocide. China rejected that report as baseless.

China has been accused of using forced birth control to limit Uyghur births, and detention camps to indoctrina­te the mostly Muslim minority into mainstream Chinese society.

Beijing has denied any wrongdoing, saying it is running a voluntary employment and language-training program.

Zhao on Monday used a number of select statistics that suggest China’s Uyghur population is growing at a faster rate than Canada’s population to mock Rae’s suggestion­s that the Uyghurs are being persecuted.

“I would like to ask this ambassador, if his logic is plausible in finding out who best fits the label of genocide, it seems that it is not the Uyghurs who are persecuted, but rather the people of Canada, am I right?” Zhao said.

However, Zhao’s statistics appear to have been incomplete or inaccurate and did not address a report by The Associated Press in June that birthrates have been dramatical­ly cut in Uyghur-dominated areas of Xinjiang.

Rae told the CBC on Sunday that “there’s no question that there’s aspects of what the Chinese are doing that fits into the definition of genocide in the genocide convention.”

Yet even as he levelled the allegation, he said an investigat­ion needs to be conducted to gather the required evidence.

In response, Zhao questioned how Rae “reached his conclusion without any evidence?”

Relations between Canada and China are at an alltime low not only because of Beijing’s treatment of its Uyghurs, but also due to its continued detention of two Canadian citizens in retaliatio­n for the arrest of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou.

Canada has also joined Western allies inc ondemning Beijing’s recent actions in Hong Kong, where the Communist regime has been accused of violating internatio­nal agreements by cracking down on democracy in the former British colony.

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