Exclusive: China urges U.N. states not to attend Xinjiang event next
week
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[May 08, 2021]
By Michelle Nichols
NEW YORK (Reuters) - China has urged United
Nations member states not to attend an event planned next week by
Germany, the United States and Britain on the repression of Uyghur
Muslims and other minorities in Xinjiang, according to a note seen by
Reuters on Friday.
"It is a politically-motivated event," China's U.N. mission wrote in the
note, dated Thursday. "We request your mission NOT to participate in
this anti-China event."
China charged that the organizers of the event, which also include
several other European states along with Australia and Canada, use
"human rights issues as a political tool to interfere in China's
internal affairs like Xinjiang, to create division and turbulence and
disrupt China's development."
"They are obsessed with provoking confrontation with China," the note
said, adding that "the provocative event can only lead to more
confrontation."
The Chinese mission to the United Nations did not immediately respond to
a request for comment.
The ambassadors of the United States, Germany and Britain are due to
address the virtual U.N. event on Wednesday, along with Human Rights
Watch Executive Director Ken Roth and Amnesty International Secretary
General Agnes Callamard.
The aim of the event is to "discuss how the U.N. system, member states
and civil society can support and advocate for the human rights of
members of ethnic Turkic communities in Xinjiang," according to an
invitation.
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Security guards stand at the gates of what is officially known as a
vocational skills education center in Huocheng County in Xinjiang
Uighur Autonomous Region, China September 3, 2018.REUTERS/Thomas
Peter/File Photo
Western states and rights groups have accused
authorities in Xinjiang of detaining and torturing Uyghurs in camps,
which the United States has described as genocide. In January,
Washington banned the import of cotton and tomato products from
Xinjiang over allegations of forced labor.
Beijing denies the accusations and describes the camps as vocational
training centers to combat religious extremism.
"Beijing has been trying for years to bully governments into silence
but that strategy has failed miserably, as more and states step
forward to voice horror and revulsion at China's crimes against
Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims," Human Rights Watch U.N. director
Louis Charbonneau said on Friday.
(Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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