Anonymous ID: af1c86 March 24, 2021, 11:28 p.m. No.13293813   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1692

>>13241638

>>13293622

China official Zhao Lijian’s fake news on Manus ‘camps’

 

GEOFF CHAMBERS and JOE KELLY - MARCH 25, 2021

 

Senior Chinese official Zhao Lijian, who sparked a diplomatic ­furore last year after posting a fake image of an Australian soldier slitting the throat of a young Afghan girl, has launched a new disinformation campaign falsely claiming the Morrison government is operating “concentration camps” on Manus Island.

 

The Chinese Foreign Ministry deputy director’s claim that “tens of thousands of people from war-torn countries” were being accommodated in overseas deten­tion centres was made despite the Manus Island processing centre closing in 2017 and the Nauru processing centre not currently housing any asylum-seekers.

 

“The #Australian government built detention centres on the #Manus Island, which ‘accommodates’ tens of thousands of people from war-torn countries. The concentration camps, as some critics call it, are still in operation,” he tweeted.

 

In a series of tweets posted on Wednesday, Mr Zhao also used a Lowy Institute report to claim “almost one in five Chinese Australians have been physically threatened or attacked in the past year because of their heritage”.

 

The Australian can reveal as of last month, the number of refugees and asylum-seekers in PNG and Nauru had fallen to 240, with 960 people resettled in the US, Cambodia and other countries since 2015.

 

Of those asylum-­seekers and refugees still on the islands, almost all are living in the Port Moresby and Nauru communities.

 

Australian Strategic Policy Institute executive director Peter Jennings described Mr Zhao’s ­social media attacks as “more wolf warrior propaganda”.

 

“I think what’s significant about it rather than the content which is just pure polemic, is here we have a country aspiring to global leadership which is just slinging insults and abuse around the place, in the spot where there used to be diplomacy,” he said.

 

“And China wonders why it’s losing friends all around the world. I think this is a very dangerous stage that the Communist Party has got itself to. But I regret we are going to be stuck with it for some years, as long as Xi Jinping is in power.”

 

NATO secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg on Tuesday night ­issued a blunt message to China that its 30 member countries would back Australia in countering Chinese bullying and bad ­behaviour.

 

Following the Morrison government’s calls for an independent investigation into the origins of COVID-19 and Beijing’s targeting of Australian exporters, Mr Stoltenberg said “China behaved very badly against Australia”.

 

In November last year, Mr Zhao sparked a major standoff between Beijing and Canberra and plunged Australia-China relations to their lowest level in almost 50 years after posting an offensive tweet of an Australian soldier, attempting to weaponise the findings of the Brereton Afghanistan inquiry.

 

At the time, Mr Morrison publicly lashed out at Beijing over its use of a “repugnant” and “appalling” fake image.

 

China’s attempted shaming of Australia came as Beijing snubbed Morrison ministers and imposed trade sanctions against local exporters, with Chinese officials slapping tariffs, bans and restrictions on Australian coal, wine and ­barley.

 

China this month said it was “deeply concerned” by the Morrison government’s operation of offshore detention centres and called for them to be shut.

 

In a statement to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, China said the detention centres “fall short of adequate medical conditions where a large number of immigrants, refugees and asylum-seekers have been detained over a long period of time or even indefinitely, and their human rights have been ­violated”.

 

China’s criticism of the offshore immigration centres coincided with Western nations pushing back against Beijing over human rights violations against Uighurs in Xinjiang.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/china-official-zhao-lijians-fake-news-on-manus-camps/news-story/d04531514c26bd2ad53d5deac7477f8f

 

 

Lijian Zhao 赵立坚 Tweets

 

The #Australian government built detention centers on the #Manus Island, which "accommodates" tens of thousands of people from war-torn countries. The concentration camps, as some critics call it, are still in operation.

 

https://twitter.com/zlj517/status/1374544411413999617

 

 

According to the Lowy Institute, almost one in five #Chinese #Australians have been physically threatened or attacked in the past year because of their heritage.

 

https://twitter.com/zlj517/status/1374526092589993984

Anonymous ID: af1c86 March 27, 2021, 1:40 a.m. No.13307537   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0303 >>1692

>>13300945

Prime Minister Scott Morrison Tweet

 

Australia stands with you Boris

 

https://twitter.com/ScottMorrisonMP/status/1375614724969140224

 

Boris Johnson @BorisJohnson

 

The MPs and other British citizens sanctioned by China today are performing a vital role shining a light on the gross human rights violations being perpetrated against Uyghur Muslims.

 

Freedom to speak out in opposition to abuse is fundamental and I stand firmly with them.

 

https://twitter.com/BorisJohnson/status/1375382504555823105

 

 

UK denounces China sanctions over Xinjiang as Western rift widens

 

China has imposed sanctions on individuals from the EU and Britain who have taken up the Uighur cause.

 

AFP / SBS - 27 March 2021

 

Britain accused China of "gross human rights violations" against the Muslim Uighur minority after China slapped sanctions on UK lawmakers and lobby groups, widening a rift with Western powers over alleged abuses in Xinjiang.

 

At least one million Uighurs and people from other mostly Muslim groups have been held in camps in northwestern Xinjiang, according to rights groups, who accuse authorities of forcibly sterilising women and imposing forced labour.

 

The European Union, Britain, Canada and the United States sanctioned several members of Xinjiang's political and economic hierarchy this week in coordinated action over the allegations, which the US has said amounts to genocide.

 

China, which insists Xinjiang is an "internal affair", has retaliated with sanctions on individuals from the EU and Britain who have taken up the Uighur cause and also spoken out on the crackdown against democracy campaigners in Hong Kong.

 

While also fuelling a social media war on Western brands, China announced sanctions against nine British individuals and four entities, saying they had "maliciously spread lies and disinformation" over the treatment of Uighurs.

 

The individual sanctions were confined to critical legislators rather than government ministers, but Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Britain stood squarely behind them.

 

"The MPs and other British citizens sanctioned by China today are performing a vital role shining a light on the gross human rights violations being perpetrated against Uighur Muslims," he tweeted.

 

"Freedom to speak out in opposition to abuse is fundamental and I stand firmly with them," he said, days after his government defended the need for critical engagement with China on climate change and trade in a new global strategy paper.

 

'Profoundly sinister'

 

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said China's envoy to London would be summoned to hear "that we will not be silenced in speaking out about these human rights abuses".

 

China's government also sanctioned the China Research Group of MPs, the Uyghur Tribunal, and Essex Court Chambers, a partnership of lawyers who wrote a legal opinion that there is a case for genocide against the Chinese government concerning the Turkic ethnic group.

 

All of the sanctioned parties will be barred from mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau, while any assets in the country will be frozen, and Chinese citizens and institutions will be banned from dealings with them.

 

The China Research Group - led by sanctioned MPs Tom Tugendhat and Neil O'Brien - accused China of a "profoundly sinister" approach to its critics.

 

"Yet more Western businesses are discovering that China is becoming a dangerous place to do business," a statement said, citing "an increasingly nationalistic and unpredictable Communist party".

 

The Uyghur Tribunal, a panel of independent UK-based lawyers, vowed to press on with its investigation into whether China is guilty of crimes against humanity in Xinjiang.

 

China flatly denies any abuses in the region, describing detention centres as work camps intended to boost incomes and deter extremism in a region made restive by central control.

 

China accused Western countries of "provoking first" with their sanctions.

 

"We can only talk and deal with them in a way they understand and will remember," foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told reporters in Beijing.

 

"I think they will get used to it gradually."

 

https://www.sbs.com.au/news/uk-denounces-china-sanctions-over-xinjiang-as-western-rift-widens