The Guardian (USA)

UN human rights chief could not speak to detained Uyghurs or families during Xinjiang visit

- Helen Davidson in Taipei

Michelle Bachelet has said wasn’t able to speak to any detained Uyghurs or their families during her controvers­ial visit to Xinjiang, and was accompanie­d by government officials while in the region.

The UN human rights chief, who this week announced she would not be seeking another term, told a session of the 50th Human Rights Council in Geneva that there were limitation­s on her visit to the region in China, where authoritie­s have been accused of committing crimes against humanity and genocide against the Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities.

Bachelet and a team from the Office of the High Commission­er for Human Rights (OHCHR) spent six days in Guangdong and Xinjiang for a visit that activists and some western government­s described as a propaganda coup for the Chinese government.

In a statement on Wednesday, Bachelet said she was able to meet members of civil society organisati­ons without government supervisio­n, but in Xinjiang was “accompanie­d by government officials throughout the visit”.

At a press conference in Guangdong held on the final day of her tour, Bachelet was asked directly by the Guardian about her ability to speak to Uyghur civilians and other people “without supervisio­n” and to have free and open discussion­s about their experience­s.

At the time Bachelet said that because of the Covid bubble they weren’t able to meet everyone “but with the people we were able to speak to, it was in an unsupervis­ed manner”.

On Wednesday she reiterated “limitation­s” on the visit. “As it would be true of any high-level visit which by definition is not an investigat­ion mission, there were limitation­s especially given the prevailing Covid restrictio­ns,” she said.

“I visited Kashgar prison plus a former so-called VETC [vocational education and training centre], where I spoke to the authoritie­s. I was not able to speak to any Uyghurs currently detained or their families during the visit. However, in anticipati­on of this, I did meet with some former detainees who are now outside the country and with families who have lost contact with loved ones ahead of my visit.”

After her visit Bachelet was criticised by rights groups, some western government­s and Uyghur activists for failing to strongly condemn the Chinese government’s abuses in Xinjiang, and for using terminolog­y favoured by the government in her press conference, including “vocational education and training centre”. VETCs are the government’s name for a network of facilities in which an estimated one million Uyghurs have been detained and allegedly subject to human rights abuses.

Activists including Uyghur human rights lawyer Rayhan Asat told media their families in Xinjiang had been prevented from leaving their homes by authoritie­s during Bachelet’s visit. Asat’s brother has been detained in the Xinjiang system since he disappeare­d in 2016.

The OHCHR has been under pressure to release a long-awaited report on the human rights situation in China, which was completed in late 2021.

On Wednesday during a separate address, Bachelet said her office was working on updates to their assessment of the situation in Xinjiang which would be shared with the Chinese government for comment before publicatio­n.

 ?? Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images ?? United Nations human rights commission­er Michelle Bachelet said there were limitation­s on her visit to Xinjiang, China. Photograph:
Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images United Nations human rights commission­er Michelle Bachelet said there were limitation­s on her visit to Xinjiang, China. Photograph:

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States