Antony Blinken highlights China’s Uygurs as victims of ‘genocide’ at US human rights report launch

The State Department report, which assesses some 200 countries and territories based on standards enshrined in international human-rights agreements, contained an extensive catalogue of China’s alleged violations, as it has for several decades.

China, the report’s preface stated, “continues to carry out genocide, crimes against humanity, forced labour and other human-rights violations against predominantly Muslim Uygurs and members of other ethnic and religious minority groups”.

Blinken’s remarks come ahead of his trip to Beijing and Shanghai later this week, where he plans to raise the US’s concerns over China’s human rights record, its “unfair economic and trade practices” and the global consequences of the country’s “industrial overcapacity”.

The secretary will “raise human rights at the highest levels and in the clearest way” while in China, said Robert Gilchrist, a senior official at the State Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labour, on Monday.

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Blinken praised progress made in human rights in several countries, including Estonia, Jordan and Japan, and said, as he did last year, that the US “faces its own shortcomings”.

“The strength of democracies like ours is that we address those shortcomings, those imperfections openly, without sweeping them under the rug,” he said.

Monday’s report arrives a month after US President Joe Biden administration’s third “Summit for Democracy” – a gathering of officials from government, business and civil society to “advance democracy, fight corruption and counter authoritarianism”.
Chinese police pin down and arrest a man during a protest on a street in Shanghai while the country’s zero-Covid policy was in place. Photo: AP

Beijing sees Taiwan as part of China to be reunited by force if necessary. Most countries, including the US, do not recognise Taiwan as an independent state, but Washington is opposed to any attempt to take the self-governed island by force and is committed to supplying it with weapons.

As in recent years, the report, which covers events from the previous calendar year, devoted some of its longest sections to China.

Beyond China’s treatment of Uygurs, it critiqued Beijing’s transnational repression of the Chinese diaspora, including students with pro-democracy views; the lack of an independent judiciary; the detention of citizens for “spreading fake news”; the “abusive application” of zero-Covid policy restrictions for journalists; and the harassment of domestic human-rights groups.
The report also noted Beijing’s continued “dismantling” of Hong Kong’s political freedoms and autonomy. In particular, it highlighted the authorities’ enforcement of the 2020 national security law, including the retroactive application of the law and the denial of bail to activists in national-security cases.

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The Chinese embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Beijing has repeatedly denied Washington’s accusations of human-rights violations, particularly those concerning the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.

In recent years, China has issued its own report on US human-rights violations citing American racial discrimination, wealth polarisation and gun and police violence, among others.

“The United States, founded on colonialism, racist slavery and inequality in labour, possession and distribution, has further fallen into a quagmire of system failure,” the State Council Information Office wrote in March last year.

American politicians “wantonly use human rights as a weapon to attack other countries, creating confrontation, division and chaos in the international community”, it added.

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