Las Vegas Review-Journal

Report: Chinese inhumanely detain Uyghurs

U.N. requested to give issue ‘urgent attention’

- By Jamey Keaten and Edith M. Lederer

GENEVA — China’s discrimina­tory detention of Uyghurs and other mostly Muslim ethnic groups in the western region of Xinjiang may constitute crimes against humanity, the U.N. human rights office said in a long-awaited report Wednesday, which cited “serious” rights violations and patterns of torture in recent years.

The report seeks “urgent attention” from the U.N. and the world community to rights violations in Beijing’s campaign to root out terrorism.

U.N. human rights chief Michelle Bachelet, facing pressure on both sides, brushed aside multiple Chinese calls for her office to withhold the report, which follows her own, much-criticized trip to Xinjiang in May.

Beijing contends the report is part of a Western campaign to smear China’s reputation.

The report has fanned a tug-of-war for diplomatic influence with the West over the rights of the region’s native Uyghurs and other ethnic groups.

The report, which Western diplomats and U.N. officials said had been all but ready for months, was published with just minutes to go in Bachelet’s four-year term. It was unexpected to break significan­t new ground beyond sweeping findings from researcher­s, advocacy groups and journalist­s who have documented concerns about human rights in Xinjiang for several years.

But the 48-page report comes with the imprimatur of the United Nations and its member countries — notably including rising superpower China itself.

The report largely corroborat­es earlier reporting by advocacy groups and others and injects U.N heft behind the outrage that victims and their families have expressed about China’s policies in Xinjiang.

“Beijing’s repeated denial of the human rights crisis in Xinjiang rings ever-more hollow with this further recognitio­n of the evidence of ongoing crimes against humanity and other human rights violation in the region,” Agnes Callamard, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s secretary-general, said in a statement.

China shot back, saying the U.N. rights office ignored human rights “achievemen­ts” made together by “people of all ethnic groups in Xinjiang.”

China released a 122-page report titled “Fight Against Terrorism and Extremism in Xinjiang: Truth and Facts” that defended its record and was distribute­d by the U.N. with its assessment.

The U.N. report says “serious human rights violations” have been committed in Xinjiang under China’s policies to fight terrorism and extremism, which singled out Uyghurs and other predominan­tly Muslim communitie­s, between 2017 and 2019.

The report cites “patterns of torture” inside what Beijing called vocational training centers, which were part of its reputed plan to boost economic developmen­t in region, and it points to “credible” allegation­s of torture or ill-treatment, including cases of sexual violence.

Above all, perhaps, the report warns that the “arbitrary and discrimina­tory detention” of such groups in Xinjiang, through moves that stripped them of “fundamenta­l rights … may constitute internatio­nal crimes, in particular crimes against humanity.”

The report called on China to release all individual­s arbitraril­y detained and to clarify the whereabout­s of individual­s who have disappeare­d and whose families are seeking informatio­n about them.

 ?? Ng Han Guan The Associated Press file ?? Residents watch a convoy of security personnel armed with batons and shields patrol through central Kashgar in western China’s Xinjiang region on Nov. 5, 2017.
Ng Han Guan The Associated Press file Residents watch a convoy of security personnel armed with batons and shields patrol through central Kashgar in western China’s Xinjiang region on Nov. 5, 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States