China says EU observers free to visit Xinjiang
EU observers are free to visit Xinjiang to
"truly understand" the situation in the northwestern region where
Beijing is accused of widespread rights abuses against the Uighur population,
China said Tuesday.
Rights groups say over a million Uighurs languish in
political reeducation camps, while a campaign of forced assimilation has
targeted academics, religious leaders and activists from mostly Muslim minority
groups.
International pressure is building on China's ruling
Communist Party over its actions in the resource-rich region, and on Monday the
European Union pressed China to let its independent observers into Xinjiang,
binding human rights to future trade and investment deals with Beijing.
In response a foreign ministry spokesman said the
bloc was "welcome" to visit the area "to truly understand the
real situation and not rely on hearsay."
"The EU has raised their desire to visit
Xinjiang, China has already agreed and is willing to make arrangements,"
Wang Wenbin told reporters.
China has rebuffed past calls to grant independent
access to Xinjiang, and the spokesman didn't confirm that EU observers would be
allowed to travel freely in the region.
Beijing describes its Xinjiang camps as vocational
training centres where education is given to lift the population out of poverty
and to chisel away at Islamic radicalism.
China says criticism of its handling of Xinjiang is
politically motivated, and based on lies about what happens in the vast
facilities it has built.
In December China also invited Arsenal footballer
Mesut Ozil to visit Xinjiang and see the situation for himself after he decried
the treatment of the Uighurs and criticised Muslim countries for failing to
speak up about the alleged abuses.
The EU joins the US in taking China to task over its
treatment of minorities in Xinjiang.
On Monday US customs said it would bar a raft of
Chinese products including cotton, garments and hair products, from Xinjiang
over fears they were made using forced labour.
China on Tuesday slammed the US move as "bullying"
and dismissed accusations of forced labour as "a complete
fabrication."



