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Swiss press human rights concerns with China

Zurich, Switzerland
Reuters

Switzerland called a meeting with China’s ambassador to express its concern about the human rights situation in the western region of Xinjiang, the foreign ministry in Bern said on Thursday, correcting its earlier comment that it had “summoned” the envoy.

“Switzerland is convinced that the best way to safeguard its interests and the respect of fundamental rights is to conduct a critical and constructive dialogue with Beijing,” the ministry said, confirming a report by the SDA news agency.

China Xinjiang centre

Security guards stand at the gates of what is officially known as a vocational skills education centre in Huocheng County in Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, China on 3rd September, 2018. PICTURE: Reuters/Thomas Peter/File photo.

The ministry cited a report last week by the United Nations human rights commissioner that China’s “arbitrary and discriminatory detention” of Uyghurs and other Muslims in Xinjiang may constitute crimes against humanity.

The Chinese embassy took issue with the original Swiss account that it had summoned the ambassador.

“The Chinese Ambassador to Switzerland, HE Wang Shihting, met with FDFA officials on the morning of 8th September, but it was just a regular working meeting, not a ‘convocation’,” it said, accusing media of deliberately distorting the situation.

China’s foreign ministry has denied the allegations about the treatment of Muslims in Xinjiang and described the UN report as “completely illegal and void”.



Neutral Switzerland has walked a diplomatic tightrope with Beijing, playing down prospects for embracing Western sanctions against China over its human rights record as Bern pursues a “special path” with a major trade partner.

In unveiling a new strategy on China last year, Bern announced few concrete policy changes and stressed the importance of bilateral ties. But it spoke more openly about its disapproval of China’s human rights record than it has tended to do in the past.

In 1950, Switzerland was one of the first western countries to recognise Communist China. Since 2010, China has been its biggest trading partner in Asia and its third-largest globally after the European Union and the United States.

A bilateral free trade agreement took effect in July 2014, and the two countries this year launched a joint platform for stock listings and trading.

 

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