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China avoids ICC prosecution over Xinjiang for now, but pressure is growing

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China will not face a case at the International Criminal Court over its treatment of ethnic minorities in Xinjiang -- for now.
Beijing is accused of numerous crimes against Uyghurs and other ethnic minority groups in the far western region, including a mass detention system, forced labor, and claims of genocide and human rights abuses.

As China is not a signatory to the Rome Statute, which established the ICC, prosecution at the court has always been a long shot. But activists had hoped to bring a case based on actions taken against Uyghurs living in Tajikistan and Cambodia, both of which are ICC members.

In a report released Monday, however, the office of ICC prosecutor Fatou Bensouda said the "precondition for the exercise of the court's territorial jurisdiction did not appear to be met with respect to the majority of the crimes alleged" since they appear "to have been committed solely by nationals of China within the territory of China, a State which is not a party to the Statute."

Bensouda's office has left the file open, meaning the ICC could still pursue a case provided more evidence was presented.
Speaking to the Guardian, Rodney Dixon, the lead barrister in the attempted ICC case against China, said his team "will be providing highly relevant evidence ... in the coming months."

"We are engaging with the office of the prosecutor as these proceedings go on with the aim of opening a full investigation," Dixon added.

The message is clear: while Bensouda's decision may seem like a win of sorts for China, it highlights the growing pressure over Xinjiang and the determination of Uyghur groups and other activists to hold Beijing to account.
Supporters of China's Uyghur minority hold placards as they gather at the Beyazit Square on October 1, 2020 during a demonstration in Istanbul, Turkey.


Supporters of China's Uyghur minority hold placards as they gather at the Beyazit Square on October 1, 2020 during a demonstration in Istanbul, Turkey.

Leading that charge at an international level is Washington, where being tough on China is by now bipartisan consensus and numerous hearings have been held on the situation in Xinjiang. US President Donald Trump has taken a hard line towards Beijing, and his government has sanctioned multiple Chinese officials allegedly responsible for human rights abuses against Uyghurs.

Ahead of the US election last month, some activists had expressed concerns Joe Biden would take a softer approach. But in a statement on Xinjiang, the now President-elect denounced the "unspeakable oppression" against Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities, which he said amounted to "genocide."

Responding to those comments, Elijan Anayit, a spokesman for the Xinjiang government, said last month that claims of genocide were "a completely false proposition and a vicious attack on Xinjiang by overseas anti-China forces."

Anayit pointed to the historic genocide of Indigenous Americans to argue the United States had no standing in this matter, and accused Washington of committing "a serious violation, sacrilege and manipulation" of the United Nations convention against genocide by targeting Beijing in this manner.

Yet while the US may have geopolitical motivations for holding China to account -- and little room to argue the ICC decision, given Washington too is not a signatory to the Rome Statute and has even sanctioned Bensouda -- it is not alone in speaking out over Xinjiang.

In a speech at the UN General Assembly in September, French President Emmanuel Macron called for an official investigation into Xinjiang. European lawmakers have also pushed for concerted action over the issue, including potential sanctions against Chinese officials.

"We will not hesitate to use our democratic clout and put these values of human rights high on the agenda in dialogues with our partners, just as we did at the two summits with Chinese leaders this year," European Council President Charles Michel said last month. "We devoted a substantial part of our discussions to the issues of the rule of law in Hong Kong and the protection of minorities in Xinjiang."

The Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China -- a grouping of hundreds of lawmakers across Europe, North America, Africa, and Asia-Pacific -- has also lobbied for international action over Xinjiang, supporting the case at the ICC and calling for a UN investigation into the matter.


The pressure comes with China's global reputation plummeting in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic. A Pew survey in October found that unfavorable views of China had reached historic highs in many countries, with a majority in all 14 countries polled expressing negative opinions of Beijing.

The most immediate effect of all this lobbying could be on international businesses that source materials and labor from Xinjiang. According to a new report from Adrian Zenz, a leading scholar on the oppression of Uyghurs, Chinese government documents and media reports show that "hundreds of thousands of ethnic minority laborers in Xinjiang are being forced to pick cotton by hand through a coercive state-mandated labor transfer and 'poverty alleviation' scheme."

Earlier this month, the US blocked cotton imports from Xinjiang over forced labor concerns -- allegations China has consistently denied. In his report, Zenz argued there was "evidence for coercive labor related to all cotton produced in Xinjiang," and said "companies should be required to thoroughly investigate the role of Chinese cotton in their supply chains, even if any related production takes place outside China."

Numerous major clothing retailers use cotton sourced from Xinjiang, and have already come under pressure for this practice. The latest findings could spark some to reevaluate their supply chains, or prompt other governments to take action and force companies' hands.

The likelihood of growing international criticism having an effect on Beijing is far smaller, however.
In September, Chinese President Xi Jinping defended his policies in Xinjiang as "completely correct." And as the ICC decision this week shows, holding countries to account is often easier said than done.

 
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Today on American propaganda "news":
Nothing happend, because nothing happend, but we still need to fulfill to our anti-China propaganda quota. So todays headline is nothing happend but we wish something would happen followed by the same lazy propaganda lies we told you yesterday.
 
Today on American propaganda "news":
Nothing happend, because nothing happend, but we still need to fulfill to our anti-China propaganda quota. So todays headline is nothing happend but we wish something would happen followed by the same lazy propaganda lies we told you yesterday.
ICC not falling for a CIA propaganda campaign.

THE REASON was in the article - quote "As China is not a signatory to the Rome Statute, which established the ICC, prosecution at the court has always been a long shot." ie. China is not part of the ICC agreement, so it can't be sued there.

You both are fed what the CCP wants you to read/see/behave/speak and act- so there is zero chance that you know what is happening to Uyghurs. The question for you is why would 10s of countries, several investigations, the UN, and the Uyghurs who escaped lie about it?
 
THE REASON was in the article - quote "As China is not a signatory to the Rome Statute, which established the ICC, prosecution at the court has always been a long shot." ie. China is not part of the ICC agreement, so it can't be sued there.

You both are fed what the CCP wants you to read/see/behave/speak and act- so there is zero chance that you know what is happening to Uyghurs. The question for you is why would 10s of countries, several investigations, the UN, and the Uyghurs who escaped lie about it?

Womp Womp :lol:
 
THE REASON was in the article - quote "As China is not a signatory to the Rome Statute, which established the ICC, prosecution at the court has always been a long shot." ie. China is not part of the ICC agreement, so it can't be sued there.

You both are fed what the CCP wants you to read/see/behave/speak and act- so there is zero chance that you know what is happening to Uyghurs. The question for you is why would 10s of countries, several investigations, the UN, and the Uyghurs who escaped lie about it?
美国威胁制裁国际法庭.jpg

America, the great defender of human rights :omghaha: :omghaha: :omghaha:
 
I'll take ICC serious once they attempt to prosecute France for their crimes In Africa, or the US in Iraq, or Austrailia In Afganistan; or India in Kashmir - and so on...

Till then China is keeping the world economy afloat and in 30 years the BAR will PROVE its clout!
 
Can replace that with The Virgin Bob Vagene indian Retard and would work the same
😂😂
You should do so if it helps you come to terms with the reality that you are told what to say/believe/act/read/watch by the CCP from the cradle to the grave.
 

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