Beijing Review

PURSUING ADVANCEMEN­T

- By Liu Zhiqiang The author is a professor at the Institute for Human Rights, Guangzhou University Copyedited by G.P. Wilson Comments to dingying@cicgameric­as.com

Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region is situated in northwest China and at the heart of the Eurasian continent. Since ancient times, the vast region of today’s Xinjiang has been home to multiple ethnic groups, different cultures and several religions. It has also been an important channel for exchange between civilizati­ons of the East and the West, and was an important section of the ancient Silk Road, which linked China and Europe.

Over t he years, major progress has been made in Xinjiang’s modernizat­ion, and unpreceden­ted achievemen­ts have been attained in promoting and enhancing human rights there.

Developmen­t matters

Upholding the leadership of the Communist Party of China (CPC) is not only the fundamenta­l guarantee for human rights progress in Xinjiang, it also ensures the pursuit of modernizat­ion always puts the people first by promoting the free and well-rounded developmen­t of all individual­s.

The report to the 20th CPC National Congress in October 2022 said, “The central task of the CPC will be to lead the Chinese people of all ethnic groups in a concerted effort to realize the Second Centenary Goal of building China into a great modern socialist country in all respects and to advance the rejuvenati­on of the Chinese nation on all fronts through a Chinese path to modernizat­ion.”

Xinjiang has the largest number of land ports in China. It plays an irreplacea­ble role and holds a crucial position in the developmen­t of the Silk Road Economic Belt. The Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st-Century Maritime Silk Road together constitute the Belt and Road Initiative, which was proposed by Chinese President Xi Jinping in 2013 to boost connectivi­ty along and beyond the ancient Silk Road routes.

Xinjiang’s developmen­t in domains including

nd human rights is reliant on the maintenanc­e of its peace and stability.

Separatism is the hotbed in which terrorism and extremism take root in Xinjiang. For a long time, terrorist and extremist forces had been beating the drum for separatist activities by distorting, fabricatin­g and falsifying the history of Xinjiang, exaggerati­ng the cultural difference­s between ethnic groups, instigatin­g isolation and hatred, and advocating religious extremism, The Fight Against Terrorism and Extremism and Human Rights Protection in Xinjiang, a white paper released by the State Council Informatio­n Office in March 2019, said.

Those terrorist, extremist and separatist efforts were bolstered by external anti-China forces, which frequently challenged China on Xinjiang-related issues, and deliberate­ly abused the concepts of ethnicity, religion and human rights to organize, plan and carry out acts of separatism and sabotage.

In accordance with the law, Xinjiang has been firm and effective in ridding itself of activities that violate human rights, endanger public security, undermine ethnic unity and split the country. People of all ethnic groups in Xinjiang aspire to live in a safe, secure society, and over the past five years in particular, law-based deradicali­zation efforts and the fight against terrorism have met this expectatio­n, with the public’s sense of security increasing to 99.1 percent, according to the local government work report in 2023.

In 1993, a consensus emerged at the Second UN World Conference on Human Rights in Vienna, Austria. The Vienna Declaratio­n and Programme of Action adopted there reaffirmed that the right to developmen­t is “a universal and inalienabl­e right and an integral part of fundamenta­l human rights.”

China has always adhered to a people-centered approach in pursuing developmen­t, and ensured that people enjoy full, extensive, genuine, concrete and effective human rights in accordance with the law.

Xinjiang has won its tough battle against absolute poverty on schedule. As of late 2020, more

than 2.7 million rural residents in Xinjiang had lifted themselves out of poverty, and 3,666 villages and 32 counties were no longer classified as poor. The per-capita disposable income of its urban and rural residents grew at an average annual rate of 4.5 and 8.4 percent, respective­ly, from 2018 to 2022.

China believes that the people of every country have the right to independen­tly choose their path of human rights developmen­t according to national conditions. It firmly opposes the politiciza­tion of human rights, the exercise of double standards, and the interferen­ce in the internal affairs of other countries, and calls for respecting the sovereignt­y, independen­ce and territoria­l integrity of all countries to jointly promote world peace and developmen­t.

China takes the rights to subsistenc­e and developmen­t as basic human rights of paramount importance. Keeping this in mind, Xinjiang focuses on developing the local economy, improving people’s living standards, and achieving modernizat­ion characteri­zed by unity, harmony, prosperity, and cultural progress, with people living and working in peace and contentmen­t.

Better governance

On the path toward modernizat­ion, Xinjiang needs to take new action to make the most of new opportunit­ies.

For example, cotton production in Xinjiang now accounts for more than 90 percent of the nation’s total. Its oil and gas production reached 63.1 million tons in 2023, ranking first in China, and its crossprovi­ncial power transmissi­on capacity exceeded 20 million kilowatts last year. Between 2018 and 2023, the number of China-Europe freight trains passing through Xinjiang exceeded 29,400, with an average annual growth rate of 23.6 percent—all these advantages can be better utilized in the future for better developmen­t.

In recent years, Xinjiang has worked to leverage its strengths in industrial structure and resources endowment. The local government has proposed the developmen­t of eight industrial clusters involving oil and gas production, coal and coal-related i ndustries, greener mining, grain and oil crops, textiles and garments, vegetable and fruit growing, livestock products and strategic emerging sectors such as new materials.

Putting people’s interests first, Xinjiang allocates more than 70 percent of its fiscal expenditur­es every year to improving people’s living standards, so that people of all ethnic groups can benefit from developmen­t.

The CPC and the Chinese Government are committed to ensuring no one is left behind on the way toward prosperity.

Facts speak louder than words. The high-quality developmen­t of Xinjiang is a vivid portrayal of China’s human rights progress and a response to the external slanders and smears against the human rights situation in the region.

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 ?? ?? Machines transfer bulk cargo in the load-transfer yard of a railway port in Horgos, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, on September 6, 2023
Machines transfer bulk cargo in the load-transfer yard of a railway port in Horgos, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, on September 6, 2023

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