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US Holocaust Museum says China boosting Uighur repression

Washington DC, US
AP

The US Holocaust Memorial Museum says it has compiled evidence of increasing government repression against Uighur Muslims in China’s western Xinjiang region.

In a new report released Tuesday, the museum’s Center for the Prevention of Genocide says there is now “a reasonable basis” to believe that previously alleged crimes against humanity versus the Uighurs are growing amid a concerted campaign to hide their severity.

UK London protest over treatment of Uighurs

Demonstrators supporting Tibetans, Uighurs and Hong Kongers take part in a protest against the Chinese Communist Party to coincide with the 72nd National Day of the People’s Republic of China, as they march along Regent Street towards the Chinese Embassy, in London, on 1st October. PICTURE: AP Photo/Matt Dunham/File photo.

“The Chinese Government has done its best to keep information about crimes against the Uighurs from seeing the light of day,” said Tom Bernstein, the chairman of the museum’s Committee on Conscience. “The Chinese Government must halt its attacks on the Uighur people and allow independent international monitors to investigate and ensure that the crimes have stopped.”

China has repeatedly rejected charges of human rights abuses and atrocities in the region.

The report, which cites witness testimony, publicly available information from dissidents and accounts provided by human rights groups, expands on the museum’s March, 2020, findings that the Chinese Communist Party had persecuted, unlawfully imprisoned and otherwise severely deprived Uighurs of their physical liberty.

The new findings include allegations of forced sterilisation, sexual violence, enslavement, torture and forcible transfer. The US Government has already determined that China’s actions against Xinjiang’s Uighur Muslim and other minority populations amount to genocide.

“The Chinese Government’s assault on the Uighur community – marked by the incarceration of between one and three million people as well as abuses such as forced sterilisation, torture, sexual violence, and forced labor – is alarming in scale and severity,” said Naomi Kikoler, director of the museum’s Simon-Skjodt Center for the Prevention of Genocide. “The damage inflicted upon Uighur individuals, families, and their community has left deep physical and emotional scars. The trauma from these atrocities will harm generations of Uighurs.”



Kikoler said the 59-page report, To Make Us Slowly Disappear: The Chinese Government’s Assault on the Uyghurs, should serve as a wake-up call for the international community to boost pressure on Beijing to halt the repression in Xinjiang.

China has said that allegations of rights abuses are lies. Just last month, China’s UN Ambassador Zhang Jun attacked a statement signed by 43 countries condemning the reported torture and repression of Uighurs and other religious and ethnic minorities in Xinjiang, where foreign governments and researchers say an estimated one million people or more have been confined in camps.

Zhang denounced “the groundless accusations” and unfounded “lies” and accused the United States and other signatories of poisoning the atmosphere of cooperation and “using human rights as a pretext for political maneuvering to provoke confrontation.”

Echoing the Chinese government’s long-standing position, he strongly defended Beijing’s efforts to develop Xinjiang, saying the lives of its people are getting better by the day and “your plot to obstruct China’s development is doomed to failure.”

The Associated Press reported in October that China’s control of Xinjiang had entered a new era in the four years since Beijing launched the brutal crackdown that swept up to a million or more Uighurs and other mostly Muslim minorities into detention camps and prisons.

Chinese authorities have scaled back many of the most draconian and visible aspects of the region’s high-tech police state, including razor wire that once ringed public buildings, the AP reported after two visits to Xinjiang.

 

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