Keep Your Promises To HK, EU Tells China

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2020-09-15 HKT 01:33
The EU on Monday called on China to respect Hong Kong's autonomy and asked it to grant independent observers access to its Xinjiang region, where it's accused of orchestrating widespread rights abuses against the region's Muslim Uighur population.
The video-conference with President Xi Jinping included European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and EU Council President Charles Michel.
"The national security law for Hong Kong continues to raise grave concerns. The EU and our Member States have responded with one clear voice -- democratic voices in Hong Kong should be heard, rights protected, and autonomy preserved," Michel said.
"We called on China to keep their promises to the people of Hong Kong and the international community."
The meeting replaced a full in-person summit with all 27 EU leaders that had to be cancelled because of the pandemic -- focused on trade and climate change, and Michel said the European side had not shied away from thorny rights issues.
"We reiterated our concerns over China's treatment of minorities in Xinjiang and Tibet, and the treatment of human rights defenders and journalists," Michel said.
"We asked for access for independent observers to Xinjiang and we called for the release of the arbitrarily-detained Swedish citizen Gui Minhai and two Canadian citizens."
Rights groups, academics and journalists have documented a harsh crackdown against Uighur and Kazakh Muslims in Xinjiang, including mass internments, enforced sterilisations, forced labour as well as intense religious and movement restrictions.
Activists say roughly one million Uighurs and others have been incarcerated in brainwashing camps, a mass detention that US officials have said has parallels with the Holocaust.
China describes the camps as vocational training centres and says it is seeking to provide education to reduce the allure of Islamic radicalism.
The EU, which has said that the measures taken in Xinjiang are "disproportionate" to any claim to be fighting terrorism, has called in the past for observers to be given access to the region, to no effect.
After another video summit in June, von der Leyen warned China would face "very negative consequences" if it pressed ahead with the law and a month later the EU limited exports to Hong Kong of equipment that could be used for surveillance and repression. (AFP)
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