UPDATED:EU, responding to UN report, condemns rights violations in China

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BRUSSELS, Sept 1 (Reuters) – The European Commission, responding to a U.N. report that China may have committed crimes against humanity in its Xinjiang region, said on Thursday that it strongly condemns human rights violations in the country.

“We are currently assessing the content of the report and we will be issuing reaction in good time,” a European Commission spokesperson told a news briefing.

“But, as we have said before, the EU strongly condemns human rights violations in Xinjiang and other parts of China – in particular the persecution of the Uyghurs and other persons belonging to national or religious and ethnic minorities.”

The report of outgoing U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet said that China’s “arbitrary and discriminatory detention” of Uyghurs and other Muslims in Xinjiang region might constitute crimes against humanity.

The report, released on Wednesday minutes before Bachelet’s four-year term ended, said rights violations had been committed in Xinjiang “in the context of the government’s application of counter-terrorism and counter-‘extremism’ strategies”.

China has vigorously denied any abuses in Xinjiang and issued a 131-page response to the 48-page U.N. report.

The European Commission spokesperson added: “The EU continues to call upon China to comply with its human rights obligations under national and international law.”

Rights groups accuse Beijing of abuses against Uyghurs, a mainly Muslim ethnic minority that numbers around 10 million in the western region of Xinjiang, including the mass use of forced labour in internment camps. The United States has accused China of genocide.

China has vigorously denied the allegations.

China’s mission in Geneva described the report as a “farce” planned by the United States, Western nations and anti-China forces based on false information and the assumption of guilt.

Speaking ahead of the report’s release, China’s ambassador to the United Nations in New York, Zhang Jun, said Beijing had repeatedly voiced opposition to it. He said the U.N. human rights chief should not interfere in China’s internal affairs.

“We all know, so well, that the so-called Xinjiang issue is a completely fabricated lie out of political motivations and its purpose definitely is to undermine China’s stability and to obstruct China’s development,” Zhang told reporters on Wednesday.

“We do not think it will produce any good to anyone, it simply undermines the cooperation between the United Nations and a member state,” he said.

PRESSURE

Dilxat Raxit of the World Uyghur Congress, a group based abroad, said the report confirmed “solid evidence of atrocities” against Uyghurs, but wished it had gone further.

“I regret that the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights did not characterise these extreme atrocities in China as genocide,” he told Reuters in an email.

Reuters reported last month that China had asked Bachelet to bury the report, according to a Chinese letter that was confirmed by diplomats.

Bachelet confirmed last week having received the letter which she said was signed by about 40 other states, adding her office would not respond to such pressure.

Bachelet, 70, plans to return to Chile to retire. Many candidates have applied for the job but no successor has been named by Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, whose choice must then be approved by the General Assembly in New York.

“Frankly to issue the report as she’s walking out the door minimizes the report,” Kenneth Roth at Human Rights Watch told Reuters, before it was released. “By issuing and running she is giving up, she’s not doing anything with it, (she is) just kind of dropping it into the bin and leaving the office.”

Still, Human Rights Watch described the report as groundbreaking.

“Victims and their families whom the Chinese government has long vilified have at long last seen their persecution recognised, and can now look to the UN and its member states for action to hold those responsible accountable,” said John Fisher, its global advocacy deputy director.

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