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China: The Colonial Roots of the Ongoing Uyghur Genocide --

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[This is an op-ed by Salih Hudayar who is serving as the Foreign Minister of the East Turkistan Government in Exile. He is also the leader of the East Turkistan National Movement and has been a prominent voice for the rights and self-determination of the East Turkistani people.]

For over a decade, the world has witnessed mounting evidence of internment camps, forced sterilizations, family separations, religious and cultural persecution, organ harvesting, forced labor, and high-tech surveillance emerging from East Turkistan—an occupied nation China refers to as the “Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.” These atrocities, targeting Uyghurs and other Turkic peoples, have led multiple governments, including the United States, to designate China’s actions as genocide, while the United Nations has identified them as crimes against humanity.

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Hotznplotzn @lemmy.sdf.org

Donald Trump’s America is becoming more like Xi Jinping’s China -

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/31700111

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[...]

The Australian sinologist Geremie Barme observes that there are “haunting parallels” between the values shared by [U.S. President] Donald Trump and [China's] Xi Jinping. They both possess autocratic personalities. Their signature chants echo each other: Trump’s “Fight, Fight, Fight” and Xi’s “Struggle, Struggle, Struggle”, and they share values.

[...]

How to measure such a convergence? Helpfully, the Chinese Communist Party compiled a checklist for us. Document No. 9 was published in 2013, during Xi’s first months as president.

The document lists the regime’s “seven taboos” [...]

[...]

The first taboo is “Western constitutional democracy”. Essential to this is the separation of powers. [...] A practical

China @sopuli.xyz
Hotznplotzn @lemmy.sdf.org
  • "Rules for Thee, but Not for Me:" China’s Diplomatic Rhetoric to Uphold International Rules Diverges Sharply from Both its Words to Party Officials at Home and its Action Abroad
jamestown.org Rules for Thee, but Not for Me

Executive Summary: Beijing’s diplomatic rhetoric advocates upholding international rules and norms, but this diverges sharply from both its words to party officials at home and its actions abroad that undermine and violate international laws and institutions. Beijing benefits from an international o...

  • Beijing’s diplomatic rhetoric advocates upholding international rules and norms, but this diverges sharply from both its words to party officials at home and its actions abroad that undermine and violate international laws and institutions.
  • Beijing benefits from an international order in which other powers are restrained by rules that it claims are biased and so chooses not to follow. This explains how Foreign Minister Wang Yi can both promise to “safeguard … the international system with the United Nations at its core” and reject inconvenient international rulings as “a political circus dressed up as a legal action.”
  • Polls suggest Beijing’s rhetoric is resonating with other countries, as Beijing offers itself as a new partner of choice to provide stability in an uncertain world. Its actions instead suggest it intends to divide democracies and create more freedom of action for Beijing.

[Archived article](https://web.archive.org/web/20250319162545/https://jamestown.org/program/ru

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Chinese leader Xi Jinping's coercion is destroying his own economy --

capx.co Xi Jinping's coercion is destroying his own economy

Football provides a useful way to understand the dead end into which Xi Jinping is leading the Chinese economy. This month, a 7-0 loss by China’s men’s team to Japan in an Asian Cup qualifier marked the colossal failure of a decade-long multi-billion dollar project to turn China into a footballing s...

Xi Jinping's coercion is destroying his own economy

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The [Chinese economic] model that has powered four decades of breakneck economic growth was reliant on cheap exports and wasteful state-led investment in property and infrastructure. It is no longer sustainable. It has led to soaring debt and diminishing returns, with China littered with ghost cities, containing 60 to 100 million empty or incomplete homes, while companies accounting for 40% of China’s home sales have defaulted. It is widely agreed that China needs to rebalance its economy, that consumers need to spend more, since private consumption accounts for just 39% of the economy – extremely low by world standards (the figure in the US is 68%). But there is no consumer confidence, with 80% of family wealth tied up in property and no meaningful social safety net.

China's leader Xi Jinping hopes renewable energy tech can replace property as a new motor o

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tardigrada @beehaw.org

China and Human Rights: Beijing’s Real Face Fails to Hide as Gifts of Water and Cyberattacks Compete -

China repays states for co-alignment variously. Its “no limits” partnership with Moscow was this week bolstered by Beijing’s propaganda outlet Global Times serving Russia’s narrative that the recent terrorist attack in its capital city may be connected to the United States of America and Ukraine, against the latter of which it is attempting to justify a war of invasion.

Making no reference to obvious use of torture, the Global Times’ English-language service tweeted that the Russia’s “investigation and interrogation” of terrorism suspects reveals a “complicated” situation and implied possible involvement from Washington and Kyiv.

Beijing also sought to keep the Maldives, one of its more recent allies, happy with the March delivery of one million bottles of glacial meltwater from colonially occupied Tibet. For years, civil society organizations have highlighted how Tibetan pastoralists are being removed from their traditional lands to facilitate resource exploitation by Chinese compa

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'Only Newsom can go to China and embarrass himself this badly:' California Governor met Xi Jinping and human rights never came up ---

During hus China visit, Gavin Newsom just handed China's Xi a big propaganda victory, while also trading away moral credibility for empty promises. When asked about human rights, Newsom had no good answer, nor even a coherent sentence, except to say that he cares about other things more — namely, climate change.

But what makes it truly embarrassing is that China’s commitments on climate change are just as illusory and fraudulent as its commitment to human rights.

China is putting hundreds of new coal-fired power plants online, permitting additional new ones each week. It is replacing all of the carbon emissions that California has ever taken offline, and then some. Despite China’s pledges on the international stage, Xi himself has stated he has no intention of following Newsom, Biden or anyone else down the West’s zero-carbon rabbit hole.

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China is trashing human rights while western governments and corporations play along