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The Weekly Round-up: A British response to Uyghur forced labour

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For several years, China has been enacting a policy of repression and brainwashing against over a million Uyghur Muslims in its northwest Xinjiang province. Reports include instances of forced sterilisation. Its hundreds of ‘re-education’ camps have been revealed as places where contact with relatives, the ability to pray and even when to use the toilet are tightly controlled. A leaked document reveals the state’s use of algorithms to score inmates on a ‘behaviour-modification’ points system, which tells guards when to mete out rewards and punishments. Absent from their homes, Uyghur places of worship are secretly bulldozed en masse.

On Tuesday, the UK government announced new rules that seek to prevent UK companies profiting from forced Uyghur labour. Companies will have to demonstrate that their supply chains are free from slavery. Public procurement rules will also attempt to exclude suppliers with links to human rights violations. This new policy appears to implement Key Proposal no. 5 of the newly created China Research Group, a think tank set up by Tory MPs to ‘counter violations of international universal human rights’. The ERG-style group was formed after China’s coronavirus cover-up operation became clear.

Two thousand miles away, on China’s southern border, David Perry QC has come under fire this week for his prosecution of nine activists in Hong Kong, including Jimmy Lai, the pro-democracy media mogul and prominent critic of the Chinese Communist Party. Although they are not being prosecuted under Hong Kong’s broadly worded and strongly opposed national security legislation, Mr Perry QC’s prosecution comes at a time when the UK government has been mulling over the decision to withdraw distinguished British judges from the ex-colony-turned Special Administrative Region of China, in reaction to the new laws.

David Cameron’s ‘golden era’ of London-Beijing relations, announced in 2015, seems a world away.

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