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China tries to prevent the release of the Xinjiang report by the UN human rights chief

China

China tries to prevent the release of the Xinjiang report by the UN human rights chief

  •  China is requesting that the UN human rights chief bury a highly anticipated report on human rights crimes in Xinjiang.
  • After receiving harsh criticism from the general public for being too lenient toward China during a visit in May, UN High Commissioner Michelle Bachelet announced she will not run for re-election for personal reasons.
  • However, she has promised to write a report on the western Chinese region of Xinjiang before she departs at the end of August.

According to a Chinese letter seen by source and corroborated by diplomats from three different nations who received it, China is requesting that the UN human rights chief bury a highly anticipated report on human rights crimes in Xinjiang.

After receiving harsh criticism from the general public for being too lenient toward China during a visit in May, UN High Commissioner Michelle Bachelet announced she will not run for re-election for personal reasons.

However, she has promised to write a report on the western Chinese region of Xinjiang before she departs at the end of August. Rights organisations charge Beijing with mistreatment of the Uyghur people living in Xinjiang, including the widespread use of forced labour in internment camps. China has vehemently refuted the claims.

According to four sources—three diplomats and a rights expert who all spoke on the condition of anonymity—the letter written by China expressed “great concern” about the Xinjiang report and seeks to prevent its distribution. They claimed that starting in late June, China sent it to diplomatic missions in Geneva and requested that other nations sign it to express their support.

When referring to Bachelet’s office, the letter said, “The assessment (on Xinjiang) will intensify politicisation and bloc confrontation in the area of human rights, undermine the credibility of the OHCHR (Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights), and harm the cooperation between OHCHR and member states.”

We implore Madame High Commissioner to refrain from publishing such a judgement.

A representative for China’s diplomatic mission in Geneva, Liu Yuyin, declined to comment on whether the letter had been delivered or to address inquiries about its content.

According to Liu, nearly 100 nations have recently voiced their opposition to meddling in China’s internal affairs under the guise of human rights as well as their support for China on matters pertaining to Xinjiang.

This support was expressed in speeches made in public at the most recent U.N. Human Rights Council meeting, which ended on July 8, as well as in the “joint letter,” as Liu called the document signed by China and the other signatories.

Bachelet would have seen a “genuine Xinjiang with a safe and stable society” when she visited the area during her May trip to China, a representative for the Chinese foreign ministry

The spokesperson predicted that efforts by other nations to “smear China’s image” through the Xinjiang problem would fail.

It was unclear if Bachelet had received the letter, and a representative for OHCHR declined to comment.

Prior to being made public, the Xinjiang report is being finalised, he continued, noting that this involves the customary procedure of sending China a copy for review.

The study will discuss how China treats its Uyghur minority. Its release has been postponed for months for unknown reasons after a team of rights specialists started compiling evidence for it more than three years ago.

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