Xinjiang genocide conference aims to up pressure on China

Xinjiang genocide conference aims to up pressure on China
A conference in the UK is bringing scholars, politicians, lawyers and human rights activists together to discuss the abusive and discriminatory treatment of Uighur people in Xinjiang and how China can be held to account.
4 min read
01 September, 2021
Evidence of human rights abuse committed by China against Uighur people continues to grow, however activists say that not enough is being done to end this crime against humanity [source: Getty]

Leading scholars and lawyers are joining politicians and human rights groups in Britain on Wednesday for the first large-scale conference to discuss the Chinese government’s alleged genocide against the Uighur ethnic group in the northwest Xinjiang region.

The three-day conference at Newcastle University brings together dozens of speakers, including senior British judges and lawmakers, and is the first to gather so many experts on Xinjiang and genocide.

It is the latest move aiming to hold China accountable for alleged rights abuses against the Uighurs and other predominantly Muslim and Turkic minorities.

Speakers will cover evidence of alleged atrocities targeting the Uighurs, including forced labour, forced birth control and religious suppression, and discuss ways to compel international action to stop the alleged abuse.

“We want it to not just be a scholarly affair — we are gathering all these people to combine their expertise and influence to up the ante, to increase pressure on China, to think of ways to bring an end to the harm on the Uighur people,” said organiser Jo Smith Finley, an academic specialising in Uighur studies.

'This is a major humanitarian disaster which is increasingly urgent,' said a conference organiser. 'Is this genocide or cultural genocide, or crimes against humanity, and how can we prosecute that?'

“This is a major humanitarian disaster which is increasingly urgent," she added. “Is this genocide or cultural genocide, or crimes against humanity, and how can we prosecute that? We are really trying to refocus on what can we do to make this stop.”

Academic Adrian Zenz, whose research on forced sterilizations among Uighur women drew widespread attention to the issue, will present official documents backing claims that Beijing wants to forcibly reduce the Uighur population, Finley said.

Researchers say an estimated 1 million people or more — most of them Uighurs — have been confined in vast re-education camps in Xinjiang in recent years. Chinese authorities have been accused of imposing forced labour, systematic forced birth control and torture, erasing the Uighurs’ cultural and religious identity, and separating children from incarcerated parents.

Chinese officials have rejected the genocide and rights abuse allegations as groundless and characterized the camps as vocational training centres to teach Chinese language, job skills and the law to support economic development and combat radicalism. China saw a wave of Xinjiang-related terror attacks through 2016.

Xu Guixiang, a Xinjiang spokesperson, denied the allegations at a news conference in Beijing this week. He said the government's policies had curbed militant attacks and restored stability to the region.

“They say more than 1 million people have been locked up in Xinjiang, but in fact, most of the graduates of the training and education centres have gotten stable jobs and lead happy lives,” Xu said.

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The US government and parliaments in Britain, Belgium, the Netherlands and Canada have declared that Beijing’s policies against the Uighurs amount to genocide and crimes against humanity.

The United States have blocked imports of cotton and tomatoes from Xinjiang and companies linked to forced labor in the region, and the European Union and Britain have also imposed sanctions on Communist Party officials.

Despite such moves and a growing body of evidence documenting abuses, critics say there has not been enough international political or legal action. It is unclear if the economic sanctions would compel Beijing or Chinese companies to change their ways. China has also retaliated by imposing sanctions on Western individuals and institutions, and called for boycotts against leading retailers such as Nike and H&M after they expressed concerns about forced labor in Xinjiang.

Finley, the conference organizer, was one of several British individuals slapped with Chinese sanctions and banned from visiting China earlier this year for her work.

One of the main goals of the conference is to consider whether diplomatic actions — such as a diplomatic boycott of the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing — can be effective in pursuing Chinese accountability.

“There’s a lot we can do in terms of shaming,” Finley said.

The conference runs until Friday and will be livestreamed online.