U.N. says China may have committed crimes against humanity in Xinjiang
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[September 01, 2022]
(Reuters) -China's "arbitrary
and discriminatory detention" of Uyghurs and other Muslims in its
Xinjiang region may constitute crimes against humanity, the outgoing
U.N. human rights chief said in a long-awaited report on Wednesday.
U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet, who has faced
criticism from some diplomats and rights groups for being too soft on
China, released the report just minutes before her four-year term ended.
She visited China in May.
China has vigorously denied any abuses in Xinjiang and issued a 131-page
response to the 48-page U.N. report.
The U.N. Human Rights Office said in the report that serious human
rights violations have been committed" in Xinjiang "in the context of
the government's application of counter-terrorism and
counter-'extremism' strategies".
"The extent of arbitrary and discriminatory detention of members of
Uyghur and other predominantly Muslim groups ... may constitute
international crimes, in particular crimes against humanity," the U.N.
office said on its website.
It recommended the Chinese government take prompt steps to release all
those detained in training centres, prisons or detention facilities.
"There are credible indications of violations of reproductive rights
through the coercive enforcement of family planning policies since
2017," the office said.
It added that a lack of government data "makes it difficult to draw
conclusions on the full extent of current enforcement of these policies
and associated violations of reproductive rights."
Rights groups accuse Beijing of abuses against Uyghurs, a mainly Muslim
ethnic minority that numbers around 10 million in the western region of
Xinjiang, including the mass use of forced labour in internment camps.
The United States has accused China of genocide.
Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin described the report
as "completely illegal and void".
"This proves once again that the OHCHR has become a thug and accomplice
of the U.S. and the West," he said during a regular daily briefing on
Thursday in Beijing, where he was asked repeatedly about the report.
'UNHELPFUL POLITICIZATION'
Bachelet, who is from Chile, said her report took "considerable work and
review" and emerged in the final moments of her tenure because she
wanted to deal with input from the Chinese government last week.
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A government installed facial
recognition device to grant residents access to their compound is
seen at a gate in Urumqi, Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China,
May 7, 2021. Picture taken May 7, 2021. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
"Dialogue and engagement is about trying to build trust –
incrementally - even when it seems unlikely. My own experience in
Chile showed me the value of this approach," she said."To be
perfectly honest, the politicization of these serious human rights
issues by some States did not help," she added. "They made the task
more difficult, they made the engagement more difficult and they
made the trust-building and the ability to really have an impact on
the ground more difficult."
Dilxat Raxit of the World Uyghur Congress, an international
organisation of exiled Uyghur groups, said the report confirmed
"solid evidence of atrocities" against Uyghurs, but wished it had
gone further.
"I regret that the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human
Rights did not characterise these extreme atrocities in China as
genocide," he told Reuters in an email.
Reuters reported last month that China had asked Bachelet to bury
the report.
Bachelet, 70, plans to return to Chile to retire. No successor has
been appointed yet.
Human rights activists hailed the report but said its timing
undermined its impact.
"She put out the report - which was her job - but avoided the
aftermath. It doesn't show the necessary leadership on how to take
this forward," said Olaf Wientzek, director of the Geneva office of
the German Konrad Adenauer Foundation.
Germany said the report confirmed that "there is cause for grave
concern" about gross human rights violations.
"We call on the Chinese government to immediately grant all people
in Xinjiang their full human rights. All those arbitrarily detained
must be released immediately," a German foreign ministry spokesman
said, adding Berlin would discuss the consequences of the report
with its EU and U.N. partners.
(Reporting by Shivani Tanna and Ann Maria Shibu in Bengaluru, Emma
Farge in Geneva, Michelle Nichols in New York, Michael Shields in
Zurich, and Yew Lun Tian and Ryan Woo in Beijing;Editing by Chris
Reese, Lincoln Feast and Raissa Kasolowsky)
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