China Daily (Hong Kong)

US condemned for lies about Xinjiang

- By CAO DESHENG caodesheng@chinadaily.com.cn

China on Wednesday condemned the United States over the latter fabricatin­g lies about the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, saying that Washington has created one lie after another to smear China and mislead the internatio­nal community.

In response to US State Department spokesman Ned Price’s comment on Tuesday that United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet’s decision to visit China was a mistake, Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said that it was the US that pressured the high commission­er to visit Xinjiang and now it was again the US that opposed her visit to China.

“How come the US changes like this? The reason is very simple: They need new lies to hide the old ones,” Wang said. “The US is worried that their lies about ‘genocide’ and ‘forced labor’ will be debunked in front of the internatio­nal community.”

However, Wang said, the lies the US spreads cannot cover the fact that Xinjiang enjoys stability and prosperity and its people live peaceful and happy lives, and instead, they will reveal the nature of the US attempt to politicize the human rights issue and make it a tool for the purpose of smearing China.

China welcomes the visit of the high commission­er and visits by people from around the world to Xinjiang, the spokesman said, and in the meantime, it opposes the so-called investigat­ion based on the presumptio­n of guilt.

He said that China will provide all necessary help to the high commission­er to facilitate her visit, and all the activities are scheduled in accordance with her intentions and based on full consultati­on between the two sides.

The visit aims to enhance exchanges and cooperatio­n between the two sides to promote internatio­nal human rights developmen­t, Wang said. “We oppose any attempt to use the visit for the purpose of political manipulati­on.”

How come the US changes like this? The reason is very simple: They need new lies to hide the old ones.”

Wang Wenbin, Foreign Ministry spokesman

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