China Daily

G7 statement denounced as ‘deliberate slandering’

- By CUI CHAOQUN in London cuichaoqun@mail.chinadaily­uk.com.cn

China’s embassy in the United Kingdom denounced on Monday a joint statement released at the conclusion of the G7 summit on Sunday, saying that the mentions of the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region and other regions in China in the meeting’s communique “distorted facts” and constitute­d “deliberate slandering” of China.

The G7 communique called for a “timely, transparen­t, expertled and science-based” Phase II COVID-19 origins study in China to be convened by the World Health Organizati­on. It said China should “respect human rights and fundamenta­l freedoms, especially in relation to Xinjiang and those rights, freedoms and high degree of autonomy for Hong Kong enshrined in the Sino-British Joint Declaratio­n and the Basic Law”.

The G7 also said it remains “seriously concerned about the situation in the East and South China Seas” and opposes any “unilateral attempts to change the status quo and increase tensions”.

In a statement, a spokespers­on for the Chinese embassy in London said the group of Western countries had distorted the facts, and urged them, especially the United States, to stop such moves, and take more steps that are conducive to promoting global cooperatio­n.

“At present, COVID-19 is still raging around the world, the global economy is sluggish, the recovery is weak, and global challenges such as climate change are becoming increasing­ly prominent. In this context, what the internatio­nal community needs is the unity and cooperatio­n of all countries,” said the statement.

The spokespers­on said Xinjiang-related issues are not about human rights, ethnicity or religion at all, but about combating terrorism, separatism and deradicali­zation. The so-called evidence used to slander China’s policies in Xinjiang is “fake reports” by some anti-China scholars that have been reported by some Western media.

Some Western politician­s and media outlets have so far largely based their accusation­s on reports by Adrian Zenz, a so-called scholar, and it has been found that these have used unsourced and wrong statistics and wild speculatio­n, making his accusation­s dubious.

The embassy spokespers­on also said the Chinese government governs Hong Kong on the basis of the Chinese Constituti­on and the Basic Law of Hong Kong, not the Sino-British Joint Declaratio­n — and that no country has the right to use the Sino-British Joint Declaratio­n to interfere in China’s internal affairs in Hong Kong.

The spokespers­on said there is only one China in the world, and Taiwan is an inalienabl­e part of China, adding that China will not allow any external forces to intervene in its affairs.

China has been proactivel­y opening up to the outside world and creating an equal and fair market environmen­t for domestic and foreign enterprise­s, and it is some Western countries that have resorted to nonmarket means to block free investment by Chinese enterprise­s, according to the spokespers­on.

Regarding COVID-19 origin tracing, the spokespers­on said it is a scientific issue and China has always maintained an open and transparen­t attitude on it. The embassy condemned the politiciza­tion of the issue by the US, saying that political manipulati­on hinders global cooperatio­n on tracing the origins of the virus.

The G7 summit, attended by leaders from the UK, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States, concluded in Cornwall on Sunday.

Just hours before a NATO summit in Brussels on Monday, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g said that “China is not our adversary” and he expects the meeting will demonstrat­e the importance of Europe and North America standing together.

“We need to engage with China on important issues (such) as climate change, Afghanista­n, arms control and other issues,” he said at a forum on Monday morning.

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