Date:

Wednesday, 16 October 2024

U.S. Blacklists 28 Chinese Entities Over Abuses in Xinjiang

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WASHINGTON: The US Commerce Department announced Monday it is blacklisting 28 Chinese entities that it says are implicated in rights violations and abuses targeting Uighurs and other mostly Muslim minorities in the Xinjiang region.

Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross announced the move, which bars the named entities from purchasing US products, saying the United States “cannot and will not tolerate the brutal suppression of ethnic minorities within China.”

According to an update to the US Federal Register set to be published Wednesday, the blacklisted firms included video surveillance company Hikvision, as well as artificial intelligence companies Megvii Technology and SenseTime.

The ban comes amid heightened tensions between the US and China, particularly over trade policy and Beijing´s actions in the western Xinjiang region.

The world´s two biggest economies are in the midst of a trade war that´s seen them impose tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars in bilateral trade.

On Monday, the White House announced that talks between the two countries were set to resume on Thursday, with Beijing´s top trade envoy Liu He due to meet US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.

The US has meanwhile stepped up its rhetoric against Beijing over its policies in the western Xinjiang region.

Right groups say China has detained around one million Uighurs and other Muslims in re-education camps in the region, actions that Washington has said are reminiscent of Nazi Germany.

During last month´s United Nations General Assembly, the State Department organized an event to highlight the plight of the Uighurs, with the US´s second-highest diplomat John Sullivan decrying “China´s horrific campaign of repression.”

“This is a systematic campaign by the Chinese Communist Party to stop its own citizens from exercising their unalienable right to religious freedom,” Sullivan said.

China had until recently denied the existence of re-education camps, but now claims they are “vocational training schools” necessary to control terrorism, while decrying interference in its “internal affairs.”

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