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Australia backs sanctions against Chinese officials over 'serious human rights abuses'

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Australia has backed international sanctions against two Chinese officials for "serious human rights abuses" against Uighur Muslims.

Foreign Minister Marise Payne - in a joint statement with New Zealand Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta - said the two governments supported the measures announced by the US, UK, Canada and the European Union overnight.

"The Australian and New Zealand Governments today reiterate their grave concerns about the growing number of credible reports of severe human rights abuses against ethnic Uighurs and other Muslim minorities in Xinjiang," the statement said.

1616474889275.png

Foreign Minister Marise Payne said the Federal Government backed international sanctions against Chinese officials over the treatment of Uighurs. (Nine)


"In particular, there is clear evidence of severe human rights abuses that include restrictions on freedom of religion, mass surveillance, large-scale extra-judicial detentions, as well as forced labour and forced birth control, including sterilisation."

In a carefully orchestrated series of statements, the US and allies in Europe, North America and the Asia Pacific created a unified show of force, announcing sanctions and issuing condemnations seemingly meant to isolate and pressure Beijing.


The US targeted Wang Junzheng, the Secretary of the Party Committee of the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps, and Chen Mingguo, Director of the Xinjiang Public Security Bureau.

"These individuals are designated pursuant to Executive Order (E.O.) 13818, which builds upon and implements the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act and targets perpetrators of serious human rights abuse and corruption," the US Treasury Department said.

1616474947602.png

A file photo of a guard tower and barbed wire fences are around a detention centre in western China's Xinjiang region. (AP)


"Chinese authorities will continue to face consequences as long as atrocities occur in Xinjiang," a US Treasury Department spokesman said.

The European Union announced its sanctions overnight, naming Zhu Hailun, former head of the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region (XUAR), and three other top officials, for overseeing the detention and indoctrination program targeting Uighurs and other Muslim ethnic minorities in Xinjiang, they said, according to the Official Journal of the European Union.

China responded almost immediately with tit-for-tat penalties, announcing sanctions against 10 EU politicians and four entities for "maliciously spreading lies and disinformation".

They will be banned from entering mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau, while their related companies and institutions are restricted from doing business with China, it said.


1616474986402.png

Drone footage of hundreds of blindfolded and shackled men, who appeared to be Uighur and other minority ethnic groups was shown to China's ambassador to the UK. (BBC)


In a statement posted by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, China accused the EU of "disregarding and distorting the facts" and "grossly interfering in China's internal affairs" by imposing sanctions against its officials.

Senator Payne and Ms Mahuta called on China to permit observers from the United Nations and other international organisations to enter Xinjiang.

- Reported with CNN

 
. . . .
View attachment 726966
A file photo of a guard tower and barbed wire fences are around a detention centre in western China's Xinjiang region. (AP)
:sarcastic: :sarcastic: :sarcastic:
This is in fact a photo of a real prison in Xinjiang China.
If this prison is BBC only evidence of a Uygur Concentration Camp then every prisons around UK, USA and the world willbe renamed Concentration Camps.

I just saw a CNN reports that says in every 8 seconds a female is being attacked in China.

:sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic:
Any Chinese who saw this will died laughing fall off the chair.
What has happens to journalism In the West today?
 
Last edited:
.
In this era where everyone has a mobile phone, there is no evidence, no pictures, no videos
It does not have to be true - just like saddam's weapons - the US need a pretext to bring down China back to the coolie level.
:sarcastic: :sarcastic: :sarcastic:
This is in fact a photo of a real prison in Xinjiang China.
If this prison is BBC only evidence of a Uygur Concentration Camp then every prisons around UK, USA and the world will be renamed Concentration Camps.

I just saw a CNN reports that says in every 8 seconds a female is being attacked in China.

:sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic:
Any Chinese who saw this will died laughing fall off the chair.
What has happens to journalism In the West today?
with all these sanction etc. the US may be able to convince indians that look we are right behind you.

they need to be coerced in to taking on China just like Pakistanis were against the Soviet Russians.

the only problem here is that indian ideology is poles apart from Pakistanis'. they were fighting to:
  • keep russians away from gwadar
  • avenge 1971
  • jihad
on the other hand indian religion -as explained by chanakya- prohibits them from taking on a stronger foe (it is sinful to fight against a god unless you are able to get another god to do the fighting)

so
America wants to fight China in India mostly at the expense of India
India wants quad minus 1 to fight China
 
Last edited:
.
US and its eye Anglo-Saxon alliance strategy has always been to turn Asians against Asian and to make Asians kill Asians.

The mindset oft he former colonialists.
Divide and Rule.

Who will knows them better than the folks like us from former colonies? The actrocities theu committed is hidden and forbidde by the British and European colonialists.

That is why Asians are generally pleased and happy that China rebuked US hegemonist at Alaska and put them in their place.

Today 10 innocent folks were shot to death at a grocery store in Colorado.
What will the US government and their News Press called this incidence.
Terrorism or is it just another day in a democratic and free USA?
Why arrested 3000 pro-freedom and pro-democracy protesters at Capitol Hill and demands that Hong Kong SAR government released all the identified culprits who stormed and burned down the legislative Council, Police Station MRT, etc


in Xinjiang thousands were mauled and killed by religious fanatical group commiting terrorism and hilariously US and EU sanctioned China Xinjiang
officials instead rewarding the terrorists.

Is it because as Hilliary Clinton admitted that USA created the Islamic Terrorists Group ISIS, Taliban and Al Qaeda?


The Western News Media circulated FAKE news and propaganda.

Now should China or Russia likewise ans similarly sanction Colorado officials if they act against the killer of innocent people there. :coffee:


Xinjiang workers enjoy full freedom and benefits working in Guangdong, academics find through 9-month-long field study
By Xie Wenting and Fan LingzhiPublished: Mar 23, 2021 09:33 PM

Nilufer Gheyret (fourth from left) talks with ethnic minority workers from Xinjiang during her research in Guangdong factories. Photo: Courtesy of Nilufer Gheyret

Nilufer Gheyret (fourth from left) talks with ethnic minority workers from Xinjiang during her research in Guangdong factories. Photo: Courtesy of Nilufer Gheyret
A research report compiled through an in-depth investigation on ethnic minority workers from Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region working in Guangdong Province was released by the Jinan University on Tuesday, which experts pointed out is the best representation to quash the "forced labor" allegations spread by the infamous anti-China pseudo-scholar Adrian Zenz.

Zenz alleged, in his latest report titled "Coercive Labor and Forced Displacement in Xinjiang's Cross-Regional Labor Transfer Program," that "labor transfers of ethnic minorities" in Xinjiang to other regions and provinces are to "forcibly uproot them, assimilate them and reduce their population density."

Zenz also claimed in his report that a working report released by the China Institute of Wealth and Economics of Nankai University (CIWE) in Tianjin in December 2019 "gives strong and authoritative evidence for large-scale, coercive stated-driven recruitments into labor transfers, and for the securitized nature of such transfers to other provinces."

On Monday, the CIWE released a solemn statement, denouncing Zenz, who, under the banner of so-called "academic research," reversed black and white and made a deliberate misinterpretation of the context of CIWE's research achievements. Zenz's so-called "conclusions" are full of mistakes and far from the truth.

The latest research report, "'Forced Labor' or 'Pursuit of Better Life' - Conditions of Xinjiang Workers Working in Other Regions" released by the Institute for Communication and Borderland Governance of Jinan University, fully exposed Zenz's fabrications. Nilufer Gheyret, a research fellow of the Institute for Communication and Borderland Governance of Jinan University and co-author of the approximately 18,000-word report, told the Global Times that in order to communicate with the interviewees comprehensively and obtain clearer and more detailed materials, the entirety of the interviews was conducted in their quotidian language.

Chen Ning, a research fellow of the same institute and co-author of the report, noted that the anti-China foreign forces' so-called "caring for Xinjiang's human rights" rhetoric is incredibly hypocritical. In the eyes of those Western "chess players," the ordinary citizens in Xinjiang are only pawns. "The chess players only want to win. Which chess player really cares about the pawns?"

Are Xinjiang workers in other Chinese cities

Are Xinjiang workers in other Chinese cities "forced to work" or are they pursuing a better life? Check out this report on Xinjiang ethnic minority workers' situation. The answer is obvious: Infographic: Wu Tiantong/GT

Comprehensive investigation

At the end of 2019, the Xinjiang regional government announced that trainees who used to be influenced by extremism have all graduated from the vocational education and training centers. Then the anti-China forces in the West who had been slandering the vocational training and education centers as "concentration camps" tried increasingly hard to find new anti-China "explosive points," and "forced labor" became one of them.

In 2020, the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) released a so-called research paper titled "Uyghurs for sale 'Re-education', forced labour and surveillance beyond Xinjiang," in which it claimed that "some factories across China are using forced Uyghur labor under a state-sponsored labor transfer scheme" and "in factories far away from home, they typically live in segregated dormitories, undergo organized Mandarin and ideological training outside working hours, are subject to constant surveillance, and are forbidden from participating in religious observances."

"I was shocked when I read this 'report' last April," Nilufer Gheyret told the Global Times.

She said that the ASPI report was so dubious. "It's full of secondary information which has no guarantee of authenticity, and the final allegations are ridiculous. Therefore, at that time, we decided to conduct a field research. With help from a professor of the Institute for Communication and Borderland Governance of Jinan University, we completed the survey and drafted the report," she said.

Different from the so-called "research reports" that anti-China forces, including Zenz, fabricated without any field investigations, the Global Times learned that to pen this report, researchers conducted field studies in five companies (including two mentioned in Zenz's report) and they used research methods including focus group interviews, in-depth interviews, and participatory observations. A total of 70 ethnic minority migrant workers from Xinjiang, including the Uygur, Kazak, Kirgiz, and Tajik were interviewed.

When Zenz learned that the Jinan University would release this report, he said on his Twitter account on Sunday that "Beijing's latest propaganda strategy on Xinjiang will consist of a multi-site fieldwork study conducted by Uyghur researchers on transferred Uyghur laborers in Guangdong. Designed to refute my findings, the new study will find only 'bright smiles' and 'no forced labor.'"

In response to Zenz's accusations, Nilufer Gheyret told the Global Times that "I don't know whether Zenz is afraid of being found out [about his lies], so he self-vaccinated to preempt his embarrassment? Our report is an objective presentation of the research facts. In contrast, I have never seen any first-hand information and on-site interviews in Zenz's so-called 'report.' If he still considers himself a 'scholar,' he should uphold the basic requirements of academic rationale and treat our research results in a correct way."

The Global Times learned that it took about nine months for Nilufer Gheyret and Chen to finish the report. All the materials used in the report are obtained through first-hand investigation. In the first part of the report, it mentioned that the research mainly aims to answer questions including "Why ethnic minority groups in Xinjiang chose to work in other regions?" "How are these workers' living and working conditions?" "What significance does working outside the region have to these workers?" "And what are their plans for the future?"

An employee works at an air spinning workshop in Xinjiang on January 1, 2021. Photo: cnsphoto

An employee works at an air spinning workshop in Xinjiang on January 1, 2021. Photo: cnsphoto


Workers' voice

Their research found that all the ethnic minority workers from Xinjiang working in the five companies being surveyed chose to work in Guangdong Province out of personal reasons. Among all those interviewed, 15 percent of them choosing to work outside Xinjiang were due to natural and social environment attractions, 36 percent were attracted by the high-incomes, 24 percent were introduced to their current jobs by family members or friends, 13 percent were attracted by educational resources, 8 percent wanted to gain language and vocational skills and 5 percent expected to broaden their horizons through taking available opportunities.

"According to the push and pull theory in demography, the reasons for migration and immigration are because people can improve their living conditions through migration. As a result, the factors that improve the living conditions in the inflow areas become the pulling force, while the unfavorable social and economic conditions in the outflow areas become the pushing force. These two forces act on the population migration together," read the report.

The more favorable social and economic conditions in some regions outside of Xinjiang became the pulling forces for these workers while the comparatively lower income and harsh natural environment became the pushing force.

"Guangdong is so clean that I have never stepped on a dirt road here. It is warm and wet all year round. I don't even need to rub oil on my face," said an interviewee hailing from Xinjiang's Hotan.

For these workers from Xinjiang, high incomes are the most important reason for their migration. The report surveyed 474 ethnic minority workers from Xinjiang in the five companies. These workers earned 49,500 to 71,500 yuan annually. In comparison, in 2019, the per capita disposable income of residents in Xinjiang was 23,103 yuan.

According to the survey, nearly two-thirds of the workers that came to the factories are family members or friends. Most workers' normal working hours are eight and some technical jobs have even shorter working hours. All the five companies being surveyed provide free accommodation for the workers with air conditioning and automatic washing machines. For couples, companies provide free rooms for them with no charge or 100 yuan a month. Some workers chose to rent homes near the factories, which cost about 300 to 400 yuan a month.

Considering the long commute, the five enterprises surveyed offer these ethnic minority workers a 30-day holiday every year to visit their families in Xinjiang and cover their travel costs. Four enterprises reimburse the sleeper train tickets and one enterprise reimburses air tickets.

The report concluded that there is no such thing as "re-education," "forced labor" or "surveillance" in any part of the process.

The in-depth investigations also found that it is their own voluntary choice of employment, and their labor rights have been fully guaranteed. These ethnic minority workers totally enjoy religious freedom, the right to use their native spoken and written language, and free choice of housing. Additionally, in order to take care of their diets and respect their religious beliefs, the companies have chefs from their ethnic groups and provide halal food options.

Uygur women learn embroidery at a workshop in Shule county, Xinjiang. Photo: IC

Uygur women learn embroidery at a workshop in Shule county, Xinjiang. Photo: IC


Hypocrisy of Western 'human rights'

"When a young Uygur man from Aketao talked with us, his eyes were gleaming. When he was herding sheep in the mountains back in his hometown, it was his greatest happiness to find shelter from the wind and sleep against a stone," Nilufer Gheyret said.

She told the Global Times that during the investigation, she cried almost every night when she came back to her residence, not only because she was happy for the workers, but also because she herself came from Xinjiang, so she could understand the feelings of the workers.

"When I first left Xinjiang to study elsewhere and came into contact with the advanced teaching environments and teaching methods, I felt so illuminated," she said.

In comparison, many of her relatives and friends have never even been outside the village. "My relatives' seven children in Shufu county, Kashi, started farming after graduation from junior high school, and each of them only had three mu of land. There was no way to get rid of poverty by farming alone, and the remaining young laborers were easily led down evil paths," she said.

Statistics from the report showed that employment outside Xinjiang brought tangible benefits for the ethnic minority groups in Xinjiang, including increasing family income, broadened horizons, improving language ability and vocational skills, better educational resources for their children, and improved family and social status of women.

The survey found that 46 percent of those workers want to stay in their respective companies to increase their income; 31 percent of them plan to use their savings to start a business in their hometown, while 23 percent plan to move to Guangdong Province permanently.

But for those anti-China forces that enjoy spreading fallacies about Xinjiang, they do not care about such life-changing stories. In a recent report by Zenz, he smeared the labor transfer in Xinjiang with his corny and false accusations. "

Asked what she thought of Zenz's "research findings," Nilufer Gheyret said, "Voluntary, free movement is everyone's right. Should the Uygurs live in Xinjiang for generations and not be allowed to go anywhere else? In winter, many ethnic minorities from Xinjiang go to Hainan [in South China] to spend the winter. According to Zenz's theory, does this mean that they are 'assimilated' by Han people?"


"Throw out the so-called 'reports' that are then hyped by the media to influence public opinion. This is a common method used by Western media outlets to smear others." Chen Ning told the Global Times.

She noted that arrogance and double standards do exist in Western ideology. Limited by this ideological framework, coupled with the fact that ordinary people don't know much about Xinjiang, they often pretend not to hear the facts.

"For example, media outlets like the BBC are doing so. The BBC is now compromising its century-old reputation. As for these so-called 'scholars' and the media claiming that they are 'concerned with human rights in Xinjiang,' whenever I hear this argument, a sentiment pops out in my heart: In the eyes of these Western 'chess players,' people in Xinjiang are only pawns. Chess players only love to win. Which chess player really loves pawns?
 
Last edited:
.
US and its eye Anglo-Saxon alliance strategy has always been to turn Asians against Asian and to make Asians kill Asians.

The mindset oft he former colonialists.
Divide and Rule.

Who will knows them better than the folks like us from former colonies? The actrocities theu committed is hidden and forbidde by the British and European colonialists.

That is why Asians are generally pleased and happy that China rebuked US hegemonist at Alaska and put them in their place.

Today 10 innocent folks were shot to death at a grocery store in Colorado.
What will the US government and their News Press called this incidence.
Terrorism or is it just another day in a democratic and free USA?
Why arrested 3000 pro-freedom and pro-democracy protesters at Capitol Hill and demands that Hong Kong SAR government released all the identified culprits who stormed and burned down the legislative Council, Police Station MRT, etc

in Xinjiang thousands were mauled and killed by religious fanatical group commiting terrorism and hilariously US and EU sanctioned China Xinjiang
officials instead rewarding the terrorists.

Is it because as Hilliary Clinton admitted that USA created the Islamic Terrorists Group ISIS, Taliban and Al Qaeda?


The Western News Media circulated FAKE news and propaganda.

Now should China or Russia likewise ans similarly sanction Colorado officials if they act against the killer of innocent people there. :coffee:



Xinjiang workers enjoy full freedom and benefits working in Guangdong, academics find through 9-month-long field study
By Xie Wenting and Fan LingzhiPublished: Mar 23, 2021 09:33 PM

Nilufer Gheyret (fourth from left) talks with ethnic minority workers from Xinjiang during her research in Guangdong factories. Photo: Courtesy of Nilufer Gheyret

Nilufer Gheyret (fourth from left) talks with ethnic minority workers from Xinjiang during her research in Guangdong factories. Photo: Courtesy of Nilufer Gheyret
A research report compiled through an in-depth investigation on ethnic minority workers from Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region working in Guangdong Province was released by the Jinan University on Tuesday, which experts pointed out is the best representation to quash the "forced labor" allegations spread by the infamous anti-China pseudo-scholar Adrian Zenz.

Zenz alleged, in his latest report titled "Coercive Labor and Forced Displacement in Xinjiang's Cross-Regional Labor Transfer Program," that "labor transfers of ethnic minorities" in Xinjiang to other regions and provinces are to "forcibly uproot them, assimilate them and reduce their population density."

Zenz also claimed in his report that a working report released by the China Institute of Wealth and Economics of Nankai University (CIWE) in Tianjin in December 2019 "gives strong and authoritative evidence for large-scale, coercive stated-driven recruitments into labor transfers, and for the securitized nature of such transfers to other provinces."

On Monday, the CIWE released a solemn statement, denouncing Zenz, who, under the banner of so-called "academic research," reversed black and white and made a deliberate misinterpretation of the context of CIWE's research achievements. Zenz's so-called "conclusions" are full of mistakes and far from the truth.

The latest research report, "'Forced Labor' or 'Pursuit of Better Life' - Conditions of Xinjiang Workers Working in Other Regions" released by the Institute for Communication and Borderland Governance of Jinan University, fully exposed Zenz's fabrications. Nilufer Gheyret, a research fellow of the Institute for Communication and Borderland Governance of Jinan University and co-author of the approximately 18,000-word report, told the Global Times that in order to communicate with the interviewees comprehensively and obtain clearer and more detailed materials, the entirety of the interviews was conducted in their quotidian language.

Chen Ning, a research fellow of the same institute and co-author of the report, noted that the anti-China foreign forces' so-called "caring for Xinjiang's human rights" rhetoric is incredibly hypocritical. In the eyes of those Western "chess players," the ordinary citizens in Xinjiang are only pawns. "The chess players only want to win. Which chess player really cares about the pawns?"

Are Xinjiang workers in other Chinese cities

Are Xinjiang workers in other Chinese cities "forced to work" or are they pursuing a better life? Check out this report on Xinjiang ethnic minority workers' situation. The answer is obvious: Infographic: Wu Tiantong/GT

Comprehensive investigation

At the end of 2019, the Xinjiang regional government announced that trainees who used to be influenced by extremism have all graduated from the vocational education and training centers. Then the anti-China forces in the West who had been slandering the vocational training and education centers as "concentration camps" tried increasingly hard to find new anti-China "explosive points," and "forced labor" became one of them.

In 2020, the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) released a so-called research paper titled "Uyghurs for sale 'Re-education', forced labour and surveillance beyond Xinjiang," in which it claimed that "some factories across China are using forced Uyghur labor under a state-sponsored labor transfer scheme" and "in factories far away from home, they typically live in segregated dormitories, undergo organized Mandarin and ideological training outside working hours, are subject to constant surveillance, and are forbidden from participating in religious observances."

"I was shocked when I read this 'report' last April," Nilufer Gheyret told the Global Times.

She said that the ASPI report was so dubious. "It's full of secondary information which has no guarantee of authenticity, and the final allegations are ridiculous. Therefore, at that time, we decided to conduct a field research. With help from a professor of the Institute for Communication and Borderland Governance of Jinan University, we completed the survey and drafted the report," she said.

Different from the so-called "research reports" that anti-China forces, including Zenz, fabricated without any field investigations, the Global Times learned that to pen this report, researchers conducted field studies in five companies (including two mentioned in Zenz's report) and they used research methods including focus group interviews, in-depth interviews, and participatory observations. A total of 70 ethnic minority migrant workers from Xinjiang, including the Uygur, Kazak, Kirgiz, and Tajik were interviewed.

When Zenz learned that the Jinan University would release this report, he said on his Twitter account on Sunday that "Beijing's latest propaganda strategy on Xinjiang will consist of a multi-site fieldwork study conducted by Uyghur researchers on transferred Uyghur laborers in Guangdong. Designed to refute my findings, the new study will find only 'bright smiles' and 'no forced labor.'"

In response to Zenz's accusations, Nilufer Gheyret told the Global Times that "I don't know whether Zenz is afraid of being found out [about his lies], so he self-vaccinated to preempt his embarrassment? Our report is an objective presentation of the research facts. In contrast, I have never seen any first-hand information and on-site interviews in Zenz's so-called 'report.' If he still considers himself a 'scholar,' he should uphold the basic requirements of academic rationale and treat our research results in a correct way."

The Global Times learned that it took about nine months for Nilufer Gheyret and Chen to finish the report. All the materials used in the report are obtained through first-hand investigation. In the first part of the report, it mentioned that the research mainly aims to answer questions including "Why ethnic minority groups in Xinjiang chose to work in other regions?" "How are these workers' living and working conditions?" "What significance does working outside the region have to these workers?" "And what are their plans for the future?"

An employee works at an air spinning workshop in Xinjiang on January 1, 2021. Photo: cnsphoto

An employee works at an air spinning workshop in Xinjiang on January 1, 2021. Photo: cnsphoto


Workers' voice

Their research found that all the ethnic minority workers from Xinjiang working in the five companies being surveyed chose to work in Guangdong Province out of personal reasons. Among all those interviewed, 15 percent of them choosing to work outside Xinjiang were due to natural and social environment attractions, 36 percent were attracted by the high-incomes, 24 percent were introduced to their current jobs by family members or friends, 13 percent were attracted by educational resources, 8 percent wanted to gain language and vocational skills and 5 percent expected to broaden their horizons through taking available opportunities.

"According to the push and pull theory in demography, the reasons for migration and immigration are because people can improve their living conditions through migration. As a result, the factors that improve the living conditions in the inflow areas become the pulling force, while the unfavorable social and economic conditions in the outflow areas become the pushing force. These two forces act on the population migration together," read the report.

The more favorable social and economic conditions in some regions outside of Xinjiang became the pulling forces for these workers while the comparatively lower income and harsh natural environment became the pushing force.

"Guangdong is so clean that I have never stepped on a dirt road here. It is warm and wet all year round. I don't even need to rub oil on my face," said an interviewee hailing from Xinjiang's Hotan.

For these workers from Xinjiang, high incomes are the most important reason for their migration. The report surveyed 474 ethnic minority workers from Xinjiang in the five companies. These workers earned 49,500 to 71,500 yuan annually. In comparison, in 2019, the per capita disposable income of residents in Xinjiang was 23,103 yuan.

According to the survey, nearly two-thirds of the workers that came to the factories are family members or friends. Most workers' normal working hours are eight and some technical jobs have even shorter working hours. All the five companies being surveyed provide free accommodation for the workers with air conditioning and automatic washing machines. For couples, companies provide free rooms for them with no charge or 100 yuan a month. Some workers chose to rent homes near the factories, which cost about 300 to 400 yuan a month.

Considering the long commute, the five enterprises surveyed offer these ethnic minority workers a 30-day holiday every year to visit their families in Xinjiang and cover their travel costs. Four enterprises reimburse the sleeper train tickets and one enterprise reimburses air tickets.

The report concluded that there is no such thing as "re-education," "forced labor" or "surveillance" in any part of the process.

The in-depth investigations also found that it is their own voluntary choice of employment, and their labor rights have been fully guaranteed. These ethnic minority workers totally enjoy religious freedom, the right to use their native spoken and written language, and free choice of housing. Additionally, in order to take care of their diets and respect their religious beliefs, the companies have chefs from their ethnic groups and provide halal food options.

Uygur women learn embroidery at a workshop in Shule county, Xinjiang. Photo: IC

Uygur women learn embroidery at a workshop in Shule county, Xinjiang. Photo: IC


Hypocrisy of Western 'human rights'

"When a young Uygur man from Aketao talked with us, his eyes were gleaming. When he was herding sheep in the mountains back in his hometown, it was his greatest happiness to find shelter from the wind and sleep against a stone," Nilufer Gheyret said.

She told the Global Times that during the investigation, she cried almost every night when she came back to her residence, not only because she was happy for the workers, but also because she herself came from Xinjiang, so she could understand the feelings of the workers.

"When I first left Xinjiang to study elsewhere and came into contact with the advanced teaching environments and teaching methods, I felt so illuminated," she said.

In comparison, many of her relatives and friends have never even been outside the village. "My relatives' seven children in Shufu county, Kashi, started farming after graduation from junior high school, and each of them only had three mu of land. There was no way to get rid of poverty by farming alone, and the remaining young laborers were easily led down evil paths," she said.

Statistics from the report showed that employment outside Xinjiang brought tangible benefits for the ethnic minority groups in Xinjiang, including increasing family income, broadened horizons, improving language ability and vocational skills, better educational resources for their children, and improved family and social status of women.

The survey found that 46 percent of those workers want to stay in their respective companies to increase their income; 31 percent of them plan to use their savings to start a business in their hometown, while 23 percent plan to move to Guangdong Province permanently.

But for those anti-China forces that enjoy spreading fallacies about Xinjiang, they do not care about such life-changing stories. In a recent report by Zenz, he smeared the labor transfer in Xinjiang with his corny and false accusations. "

Asked what she thought of Zenz's "research findings," Nilufer Gheyret said, "Voluntary, free movement is everyone's right. Should the Uygurs live in Xinjiang for generations and not be allowed to go anywhere else? In winter, many ethnic minorities from Xinjiang go to Hainan [in South China] to spend the winter. According to Zenz's theory, does this mean that they are 'assimilated' by Han people?"


"Throw out the so-called 'reports' that are then hyped by the media to influence public opinion. This is a common method used by Western media outlets to smear others." Chen Ning told the Global Times.

She noted that arrogance and double standards do exist in Western ideology. Limited by this ideological framework, coupled with the fact that ordinary people don't know much about Xinjiang, they often pretend not to hear the facts.

"For example, media outlets like the BBC are doing so. The BBC is now compromising its century-old reputation. As for these so-called 'scholars' and the media claiming that they are 'concerned with human rights in Xinjiang,' whenever I hear this argument, a sentiment pops out in my heart: In the eyes of these Western 'chess players,' people in Xinjiang are only pawns. Chess players only love to win. Which chess player really loves pawns?

The West hopes that the Uyghurs are backward, primitive and poor, so they can easily manipulate.
Australia has backed international sanctions against two Chinese officials for "serious human rights abuses" against Uighur Muslims.

Foreign Minister Marise Payne - in a joint statement with New Zealand Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta - said the two governments supported the measures announced by the US, UK, Canada and the European Union overnight.

"The Australian and New Zealand Governments today reiterate their grave concerns about the growing number of credible reports of severe human rights abuses against ethnic Uighurs and other Muslim minorities in Xinjiang," the statement said.

View attachment 726965
Foreign Minister Marise Payne said the Federal Government backed international sanctions against Chinese officials over the treatment of Uighurs. (Nine)


"In particular, there is clear evidence of severe human rights abuses that include restrictions on freedom of religion, mass surveillance, large-scale extra-judicial detentions, as well as forced labour and forced birth control, including sterilisation."

In a carefully orchestrated series of statements, the US and allies in Europe, North America and the Asia Pacific created a unified show of force, announcing sanctions and issuing condemnations seemingly meant to isolate and pressure Beijing.


The US targeted Wang Junzheng, the Secretary of the Party Committee of the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps, and Chen Mingguo, Director of the Xinjiang Public Security Bureau.

"These individuals are designated pursuant to Executive Order (E.O.) 13818, which builds upon and implements the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act and targets perpetrators of serious human rights abuse and corruption," the US Treasury Department said.

View attachment 726966
A file photo of a guard tower and barbed wire fences are around a detention centre in western China's Xinjiang region. (AP)


"Chinese authorities will continue to face consequences as long as atrocities occur in Xinjiang," a US Treasury Department spokesman said.

The European Union announced its sanctions overnight, naming Zhu Hailun, former head of the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region (XUAR), and three other top officials, for overseeing the detention and indoctrination program targeting Uighurs and other Muslim ethnic minorities in Xinjiang, they said, according to the Official Journal of the European Union.

China responded almost immediately with tit-for-tat penalties, announcing sanctions against 10 EU politicians and four entities for "maliciously spreading lies and disinformation".

They will be banned from entering mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau, while their related companies and institutions are restricted from doing business with China, it said.


View attachment 726967
Drone footage of hundreds of blindfolded and shackled men, who appeared to be Uighur and other minority ethnic groups was shown to China's ambassador to the UK. (BBC)


In a statement posted by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, China accused the EU of "disregarding and distorting the facts" and "grossly interfering in China's internal affairs" by imposing sanctions against its officials.

Senator Payne and Ms Mahuta called on China to permit observers from the United Nations and other international organisations to enter Xinjiang.

- Reported with CNN


Australia still learned a lesson and did not participate in sanctions.
 
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China is being sanctioned because China is pulling political as well as financial markets away from America, and has somewhat stopped bending over backwards like it did earlier.

As far as Xinjiang is concerned , i don't see how the treatment is any different to what they are already doing to there southerners .
At worst bringing them into the Han nationalist ambit through propaganda and camp training.
 
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China is being sanctioned because China is pulling political as well as financial markets away from America, and has somewhat stopped bending over backwards like it did earlier.

As far as Xinjiang is concerned , i don't see how the treatment is any different to what they are already doing to there southerners .
At worst bringing them into the Han nationalist ambit through propaganda and camp training.

Earth-shaking changes have taken place in Xinjiang, anti-terrorism and de-radicalization education, huge infrastructure, industrialization, compulsory education, and the popularization of Mandarin. Of course, there is poverty alleviation. If you listen to Western propaganda every day, you cannot believe how happy the majority of Uyghurs are with the changes in their hometown. There are many Uyghur video producers active on the Internet in China. They also do live broadcasts. Even remote villages have a new look. The construction of transportation and communication infrastructure has enabled them to start e-commerce.

In fact, in my eyes, Xinjiang’s changes are not much different from other parts of China. The only difference is that Xinjiang needs to solve the security problem first, and then it is the same as the poverty alleviation in other parts of China.
 
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Australia has backed international sanctions against two Chinese officials for "serious human rights abuses" against Uighur Muslims.

Foreign Minister Marise Payne - in a joint statement with New Zealand Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta - said the two governments supported the measures announced by the US, UK, Canada and the European Union overnight.

"The Australian and New Zealand Governments today reiterate their grave concerns about the growing number of credible reports of severe human rights abuses against ethnic Uighurs and other Muslim minorities in Xinjiang," the statement said.

View attachment 726965
Foreign Minister Marise Payne said the Federal Government backed international sanctions against Chinese officials over the treatment of Uighurs. (Nine)


"In particular, there is clear evidence of severe human rights abuses that include restrictions on freedom of religion, mass surveillance, large-scale extra-judicial detentions, as well as forced labour and forced birth control, including sterilisation."

In a carefully orchestrated series of statements, the US and allies in Europe, North America and the Asia Pacific created a unified show of force, announcing sanctions and issuing condemnations seemingly meant to isolate and pressure Beijing.


The US targeted Wang Junzheng, the Secretary of the Party Committee of the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps, and Chen Mingguo, Director of the Xinjiang Public Security Bureau.

"These individuals are designated pursuant to Executive Order (E.O.) 13818, which builds upon and implements the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act and targets perpetrators of serious human rights abuse and corruption," the US Treasury Department said.

View attachment 726966
A file photo of a guard tower and barbed wire fences are around a detention centre in western China's Xinjiang region. (AP)


"Chinese authorities will continue to face consequences as long as atrocities occur in Xinjiang," a US Treasury Department spokesman said.

The European Union announced its sanctions overnight, naming Zhu Hailun, former head of the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region (XUAR), and three other top officials, for overseeing the detention and indoctrination program targeting Uighurs and other Muslim ethnic minorities in Xinjiang, they said, according to the Official Journal of the European Union.

China responded almost immediately with tit-for-tat penalties, announcing sanctions against 10 EU politicians and four entities for "maliciously spreading lies and disinformation".

They will be banned from entering mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau, while their related companies and institutions are restricted from doing business with China, it said.


View attachment 726967
Drone footage of hundreds of blindfolded and shackled men, who appeared to be Uighur and other minority ethnic groups was shown to China's ambassador to the UK. (BBC)


In a statement posted by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, China accused the EU of "disregarding and distorting the facts" and "grossly interfering in China's internal affairs" by imposing sanctions against its officials.

Senator Payne and Ms Mahuta called on China to permit observers from the United Nations and other international organisations to enter Xinjiang.

- Reported with CNN



It is time West reconciles with the fact that China is the new Top Cop of the world.
 
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It is time West reconciles with the fact that China is the new Top Cop of the world.
As soon as someone uses the term 'the west' it becomes apparent that person is lazy and expedient. There is no accurate definition of 'the west', it isn't some monolithic grouping of nations. Does it include liberal democratic Eurocentric countries only? Where does a country like Japan fit into this idea of 'the west', or South Korea? There is no definitive list, its a lazy and artificial construct.
 
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