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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/39451341

Archived

A visiting US-based Chinese human rights advocate on Sunday urged Taiwanese to better understand authoritarianism in China, after observing the outcome of Saturday’s recall elections against 24 Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) lawmakers.

Sophie Luo Shengchun (羅勝春), the wife of jailed Chinese human rights lawyer Ding Jiaxi (丁家喜), said that witnessing the elections firsthand reminded her of how precious and resilient Taiwanese democracy is.

“If people do not understand China’s authoritarianism, they cannot truly appreciate Taiwan’s freedom,” she said, recounting her experience of being forced to flee China due to the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) persecution of her husband.

[...]

The CCP’s “suppression of free speech, arbitrary detention, torture and acts of genocide are serious threats that the democratic world should remain highly vigilant against,” she said, urging Taiwanese to gain a deeper understanding of the situation in China.

[...]

Wester Yang (楊若暉), public affairs director of the overseas Chinese student group Assembly of Citizens, said Taiwan’s open environment shows how valuable freedom is.

“Even the air here feels fresh,” he said, adding that China’s influence operations in Taiwan is not fictional, but a “bloodless yet profound silent war.”

Yang called on Taiwanese to remain vigilant and to support global efforts for human rights and democratic transformation in China.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/38587333

Archived

[...]

China’s growing joint operations with Russia also pose serious security concerns to Japan, along with increasing tension around Taiwan and threats coming from North Korea, the Defense Ministry said in an annual military report submitted to Cabinet on Tuesday.

“The international society is in a new crisis era as it faces the biggest challenges since the end of World War II,” the report said, citing significant changes to the global power balance while raising concerns about an escalation of the China-U.S. rivalry.

The security threats are concentrated in the Indo-Pacific, where Japan is located, and could get worse in the future, the report said.

[...]

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/38367381

This is an op-ed by Amalendu Misra, Professor of International Politics, Lancaster University.

The Brics group of nations has just concluded its 17th annual summit in the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro. But, despite member states adopting a long list of commitments covering global governance, finance, health, AI and climate change, the summit was a lacklustre affair.

The two most prominent leaders from the group’s founding members – Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – were conspicuously absent. Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, only attended virtually due to an outstanding arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court over his role in the war in Ukraine.

China’s Xi Jinping avoided the summit altogether for unknown reasons, sending his prime minister, Li Qiang, instead. This was Xi’s first no-show at a Brics summit, with the snub prompting suggestions that Beijing’s enthusiasm for the group as part of an emerging new world order is in decline.

[...]

The Brics group is a behemoth. Its full 11 members account for 40% of the world’s population and economy. But the bloc is desperately short of providing any cohesive alternative global leadership.

While Brazil used its position as host to highlight Brics as a truly multilateral forum capable of providing leadership in a new world order, such ambitions are thwarted by the many contradictions plaguing this bloc.

Among these are tensions between founding members China and India, which have been running high for decades.

There are other contradictions, too. In their joint Rio declaration, the group’s members decried the recent Israeli and US attacks on Iran. Brazil’s president, Luiz Inácio “Lula” da Silva, also used his position as summit host to criticise the Israeli offensive in Gaza.

But this moral high ground appears hollow when you consider that the Russian Federation, a key member of Brics, is on a mission to destroy Ukraine. And rather than condemning Russia, Brics leaders used the Rio summit to criticise recent Ukrainian attacks on Russia’s railway infrastructure.

[...]

Brics declared intention to address the issue of climate change is also problematic. The Rio declaration conveyed the group’s support for multilateralism and unity to achieve the goals of the Paris agreement. But, despite China making significant advances in its green energy sector, Brics contains some of the world’s biggest emitters of greenhouse gases as well as several of the largest oil and gas producers.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/38298775

Archived

  • Massive industrial overcapacity in China – driven by aggressive state subsidies – is pushing down prices and profits, particularly in the auto sector.
  • Beijing is trying to rein in «disorderly price competition» by tightening controls and guiding the orderly shutdown of uncompetitive firms.
  • Analysts warn of looming bankruptcies, deflationary pressure and potential social unrest, as heavily indebted giants like BYD and Nio come under growing scrutiny.

China’s leadership is struggling to rein in the forces it helped unleash. For years, President Xi Jinping has championed industrial expansion, urging Chinese companies to ramp up output, especially in strategic sectors like solar energy, electric vehicles and battery manufacturing. In the Communist Party’s official terminology, this is known as «high-quality development.»

Local governments, tasked with driving economic policy on the ground, eagerly answered the call – pumping vast subsidies into industrial buildouts. But the result is becoming hard to ignore: Across a range of industries, China is now grappling with massive overcapacity. The glut is driving down prices and eroding profits. In May, industrial earnings dropped 9.1% compared with a year earlier.

Now, the central government is hitting the brakes. Over the past ten days, the state-run People’s Daily has published two commentaries on the issue. One blamed a «volatile external environment and weak domestic demand» for «distorting the market mechanism» across several industries. A «race to the bottom,» it warned, is already underway.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/38235953

Archived

China’s ambassador to Manila was summoned after Beijing imposed sanctions on a former Filipino senator who has been critical of China’s aggressive actions in the disputed South China Sea, Philippine officials said Tuesday.

The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs said last week that it was indefinitely prohibiting former Philippine senator Francis Tolentino from entering China and its territories of Hong Kong and Macao.

The ministry alluded to Tolentino as being among anti-China politicians who have resorted to “malicious words and deeds” that have harmed China’s interests and undermined China-Philippines relations.

“The Chinese government is determined to defend its national sovereignty, security and development interests,” the Chinese Foreign Ministry said.

Philippine officials said the barring of Tolentino was “inconsistent with the norms of mutual respect.”

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/38115904

Archived

This is an op-ed by Chen Kuan-ting, one of Taiwan's Democratic Progressive Party legislator and a member of the Foreign Affairs and National Defense Committee. Sana Hashmi is a fellow at the Taiwan-Asia Exchange Foundation.

[...]

For years, Taiwan has weathered economic coercion, military threats, diplomatic isolation, political interference, espionage and disinformation, but the direct targeting of elected leaders abroad signals an alarming escalation in Beijing’s campaign of hostility.

Czech military intelligence recently uncovered a plot that reads like fiction, but is all too real. Chinese diplomats and civil secret service in Prague had planned to ram the motorcade of then-vice president-elect Hsiao Bi-khim (蕭美琴) and physically assault her during her visit to the Czech Republic in March last year.

Taiwanese officials have rightly labeled this as “transnational repression.” We should call it what it is: endangering the life of a democratically elected leader. Although Czech authorities thwarted the plot, the warning is clear: Beijing is willing to cross any line to threaten and silence Taiwanese leadership. This cannot be allowed to become the new normal. In a world that claims to be governed by a rules-based international order, this was nothing short of a planned political attack, one that must not be dismissed or normalized under the cover of the “one China” policy.

[...]

The Prague incident marks a new threshold: What was once intimidation is now premeditated violence. This is not diplomacy; it is state-sponsored coercion.

This is happening now because Beijing’s traditional tactics are faltering. Taiwan has grown more resilient, deepening its partnerships across Europe and Asia, and garnering broader international support. As diplomatic poaching yields diminishing returns, China is resorting to more extreme measures to intimidate Taiwanese leaders and deter others from engaging with Taipei. The strategy is plain: To keep Taiwan off the international stage and isolate it by any means necessary.

[...]

If the world is serious about upholding a rules-based order, now is the time to draw firm boundaries and stand together in its defense.

“Taiwan will not be isolated by intimidation,” Hsiao said.

Indeed, Taiwan will neither be intimidated nor silenced. However, the international community must do its part: Support Taiwan’s right to exist, engage and remain secure. A stable Indo-Pacific region and a functioning international order are impossible if Taiwan is left vulnerable to violence, coercion and repression.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/37947475

Archived

THE Centre for Natural Resource Governance (CNRG), a civil society and human rights organization, is pleading with the government of Zimbabwe to urgently rein in the operations of a Magunje-based Chinese miner over a web of human rights violations.

alleged that China-based West International Holdings, in partnership with local Labenmon Investments, following documented human rights abuses, forced displacements, and environmental destruction linked to the Magunje cement and mining projects, has presided over gross human rights abuses.

CNRG said the two companies are jointly investing US$1 billion to construct a cement plant in Magunje, Mashonaland West, with a production capacity of 900,000 tons of cement per year, and 1.8 million tons of clinker, supported by a 100MW captive power plant. The investment is also expected to generate 5,000 jobs.

"However, the promise of economic opportunity is being undermined by allegations of land grabs, community exclusion, and rights violations in the host area.

"Following growing distress calls from the community, CNRG visited the area and documented overwhelming evidence of land dispossession, intimidation, pollution, and labour exploitation in the name of clean energy and development," said CNRG.

Part of the findings was that families were uprooted from their ancestral land without compensation after the companies took advantage of fraudulent consultation exercises.

The organisation reported that eight villagers from Kapere, including the Headman, were arrested for protecting their land and have been repeatedly appearing in Karoi Magistrate Court, despite the absence of the complainants.

CNRG staff were also threatened by armed Zimbabwe National Army personnel at a mining site in Kemapondo village.

Magunje Dam, a vital source of water for thousands of residents, is allegedly being polluted by effluent discharge from the cement plant, leading to the destruction of farmlands and gardens following fires ignited by the company during a land-clearing exercise.

The mining rights-based organisation said workers employed by the companies are operating under unsafe conditions, political discrimination, lack of contracts and low wages that are pegged below the National Employment Council (NEC) agreed rates.

[...]

Mining operations have long been fraught with environmental disasters and human rights issues. For China, the growing coverage of these issues increasingly challenges its framing of its operations as mutually beneficial and aligned with global green energy goals.

In 2024, President Xi Jinping said China's relations with Africa were enjoying their "best period in history". This view is echoed in China's media coverage, with focus on the successes and emphasis on the "win-win" narratives about its operations.

The "win-win" slogan was found to resonate in North African social media discussions, where users expressed greater trust in China than other Western or regional partners.

A timeline of rights abuses by Chinese mining companies in Africa by British broadcaster BBC presents a different perspective - one that is more prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa than it is in the north. It offers a glimpse into the steady negative coverage threatening China's image in its longstanding relationship with Africa.

[...]

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/37905152

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[...]

The [Ukrainian] foreign ministry said that Russian use of anti-personnel mines since 2014, which increased after the full-scale invasion of 2022, has created an unequal situation that limits Ukraine’s right to self-defence.

In his nightly video address, Zelensky accused Moscow of “using anti-personnel mines with utmost cynicism” in Ukrainian territory and of seeking to “destroy life by all means at their disposal”. He also described anti-personnel mines as “often the instrument for which nothing can be substituted for defence purposes”.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/37845691

Archived

The Philippines and Lithuania signed an agreement to build a security alliance resulting from their mutual alarm over what they perceive as growing aggression threatening their regions by countries such as China.

The memorandum of understanding signed Monday in Manila by Philippine Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jr. and his Lithuanian counterpart, Dovilė Šakalienė, would foster defense cooperation particularly in cyber security, defense industries, munitions production, addressing threats and maritime security, the Department of National Defense in Manila said.

Šakalienė described Lithuania’s alarm over an emerging “authoritarian axis” of Russia, China, North Korea and Iran, which she raised in an international defense forum in Singapore last month. The emerging alliance needed to be confronted by a unified response from pro-democracy countries, she said.

“What we see now is that authoritarian states are really cooperating very efficiently,” Šakalienė said at a news conference with Teodoro. “One of the worst results is the cooperation on Ukraine.”

[...]

Šakalienė cited China’s actions toward Taiwan and Filipino fishermen in the disputed South China Sea, which Beijing has claimed virtually in its entirety. The Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Taiwan and Brunei have been involved in prolonged territorial standoffs but confrontations between Chinese and Philippine coast guard and naval forces have particularly spiked in recent years.

[...]

The Philippines has adopted a strategy of shaming China by documenting Beijing’s assertive actions in the disputed waters, a key global trade route, to rally international support.

“We see these horrifying materials, videos of how they are threatening Filipino fishermen, how they are treating people who are simply making their living in their own waters, in their own territory,” Šakalienė said. “If they work together to threaten us, then we must work together to defend ourselves.”

[...]

Šakalienė expressed support to former Filipino senator Francis Tolentino while in the capital for talks aimed at deepening defense ties between the two countries.

Tolentino was sanctioned by China on Tuesday for his strong criticisms of Beijing’s acts of aggression and for his work on two new laws, which demarcated Philippine territorial zones, including in parts of the South China Sea that Beijing claims.

Šakalienė said she and her family had also been sanctioned by China and banned from entering the country for her strong criticisms of China’s aggression and human rights record.

[...]

Šakalienė said that in the Baltic Sea, Chinese ships and crew members have helped suspected Russian fleets damage undersea oil pipelines, and data and electricity cables belonging to rival European nations like Lithuania by dragging steel anchors on the seafloor. She warned that such acts of sabotage could also be carried out in Asia by China and Russia.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/37731125

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[...]

China's top diplomat Wang Yi heads to Europe on Monday seeking a closer relationship that can provide an "anchor of stability" in the world and act as a counterweight to the United States [...] but deep frictions remain over both the economy – including a yawning trade deficit of $357.1 billion between China and the EU – and Beijing's continuing close ties with Russia despite Moscow's war in Ukraine.

[...]

The war in Ukraine will likely be high on the agenda, with European leaders having been forthright in condemning what they see as Beijing's support of Moscow.

China has portrayed itself as a neutral party in Russia's more than three-year war with Ukraine.

But Western governments say Beijing's close ties have given Moscow crucial economic and diplomatic support, and they have urged China to do more to press Russia to end the war.

[...]

Ties between Europe and China have also strained in recent years as the EU seeks to get tougher on what it says are unfair economic practices by Beijing.

[...]

Tensions flared this month after the EU banned Chinese firms from government medical device purchases worth more than €5 million ($5.8 million) in retaliation for limits Beijing places on access to its own market.

The latest salvo in trade tensions between the 27-nation bloc and China covered a wide range of healthcare supplies, from surgical masks to X-ray machines, that represent a market worth €150 billion in the EU.

[...]

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/37651981

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Taiwan's top China policy body, the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC), on Friday said Hsiao Bi-khim's motorcade was surveilled and followed in a ploy to be rammed during a visit to the Czech Republic in March 2024.

Citing a Czech intelligence agency report, the council said staff from the Chinese Embassy in Prague were behind the incident.

Czech military intelligence spokesman Jan Pejsek told AFP on Sunday that Hsiao was targeted by "persons legalised in diplomatic positions at the Chinese Embassy in Prague".

He said they tailed her and sought information about Hsiao's programme and meetings with Czech officials.

"We even recorded attempts by the Chinese civil secret service to create conditions for a demonstrative kinetic action against a protected person, which, however, did not go beyond the preparatory stage," Pejsek added.

Hsiao, who was vice president-elect at the time of the trip, posted on social media on Saturday, that she "had a great visit to Prague & thank the Czech authorities for their hospitality & ensuring my safety".

"The CCP's unlawful activities will NOT intimidate me from voicing Taiwan's interests in the international community," she said.

"Taiwan will not be isolated by intimidation," she added.

'Violent nature'

Like most countries, Prague does not have official diplomatic relations with Taipei.

China claims Taiwan as its territory and in recent years, has ramped up the deployment of fighter jets and warships around the self-ruled island. It has also sought to erase Taiwan from the international stage by poaching its diplomatic allies and blocking it from global forums.

Taipei said on Friday that "the Chinese Embassy in the Czech Republic followed, conducted surveillance on, and even attempted to ram the motorcade, seriously threatening the personal safety of Vice President Hsiao and her entourage".

It added the incident exposed CCP's "violent nature" and lack of "sincerity" in communication.

[...]

"China uses legal grey areas to harass, threaten or oppress their targets," [one] official said.

[...]

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/37544629

Archived

More than 30 percent of imported children’s products bought through overseas direct-purchase platforms such as AliExpress and Temu failed safety standards, the Seoul Metropolitan Government announced Friday.

Out of 35 children’s items tested — including umbrellas, raincoats, and boots — 11 were found to contain hazardous substances or failed to meet physical safety requirements. All eight umbrellas examined failed safety tests, with several posing multiple risks.

Six umbrellas contained phthalate plasticizers at levels above legal limits, with one product exceeding the threshold 443.5 times over. Two also contained lead up to 27.7 times higher than allowed. Physical risks included sharp points, weak caps and exposed rib ends that could cause injury.

Phthalates are endocrine-disrupting chemicals that can cause reproductive issues. The International Agency for Research on Cancer classifies them as Group 2B, or possibly carcinogenic to humans.

Three raincoats also failed physical safety tests due to the use of decorative cords on hoods or drawstrings, which are prohibited. These cords were not properly attached to the garments, as required by safety regulations.

Some products also exceeded the maximum allowed length of 7.5 centimeters (2.95 inches) for back adjustment tabs, increasing the risk of entanglement or injury.

Another raincoat was found to contain 32.6 times the legal limit of formaldehyde, a major indoor air pollutant known to cause “sick building syndrome.” Formaldehyde is a carcinogen that can irritate the eyes, cause headaches and trigger breathing difficulties.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/37002239

[...]

Millions of mines and unexploded ordnances are currently scattered throughout Ukraine. This makes it the most heavily contaminated country since the end of the Second World War, said Paul Heslop, the UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS) advisor in Ukraine.

UNMAS estimates that over 20 per cent of land — or 139,000 square kilometres — in Ukraine is contaminated by mines or unexploded ordnances.

Over six million people live in or around contaminated areas and over 800 casualties due to unexploded ordnances have been documented. This is the real contamination.

But Mr. Heslop noted that for every one square kilometre which is actually contaminated, there are 100 which are not. However, that does not mean that residents feel they can safely return to the land. This is the “perceived contamination” of unexploded ordnances.

UNMAS is working to identify which of the 139,000 square kilometres of potentially contaminated land is safe.

[...]

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crosspostato da: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/36769368

Archived

A Hong Kong group that advocated for workers rights for decades announced its shutdown abruptly on Thursday, citing financial difficulties and debt issues.

China Labor Bulletin planned to stop updating its website content and appeared to have deleted Facebook and Instagram social media accounts used by the nonprofit rights organization.

“The company can no longer maintain operations and has decided to dissolve and initiate the relevant procedures,” it said in a statement on an archived web page.

[...]

Founded in 1994, the organization maintained a database tracking workers’ strikes, protests, workplace accidents and other labor rights incidents in China.

As dozens of civil society groups disbanded or left Hong Kong in the wake of the 2020 Beijing-imposed national security law, China Labor Bulletin continued providing valuable resources for journalists and academics in the southern Chinese city.

[...]

China Labor Bulletin’s founder Han Dongfang, a former railway worker who participated in the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests, did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press. He told the Central News Agency of Taiwan that the shutdown was his decision and he would stay in Hong Kong.

Han’s decision appeared sudden to many Hong Kong civil society observers. Three weeks ago, he wrote on social media platform LinkedIn about his work anniversary and his team’s progress.

“Let’s keep our faith up at this abnormal time and continue our important work,” he said.

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crosspostato da: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/36740689

Archived

There are no detention camps in Xinjiang, Chinese authorities said once the evidence and outcry became too much to deny completely – only vocational education and training centres. And those held there, they said, are not detainees at all but trainees who benefit greatly from their stay.

“The centres provide free education,” Chinese official Aierken Tuniyazi told a session of the UN Human Rights Council in June 2019 [...] The trainees’ personal dignity and freedoms are protected and they are allowed to go home on a regular basis, he said. Many had already “graduated” from the centres to live “a happy life with better quality”.

[...]

This was the narrative carefully propagated by Chinese government and state media, and armies of online commentators. None of it corresponded with the experiences of Uyghurs, Kazakhs and others caught up in the crackdown on Xinjiang’s Muslim minorities that a 2022 United Nations report found could constitute crimes against humanity, and the United States and other countries have described as genocide.

Only a tiny fraction of the estimated one million detained in camps and prisons managed to escape abroad. I spoke with a series of them in Turkey, Kazakhstan and the US while researching my book, Those Who Should Be Seized Should Be Seized, which investigates China’s oppression of its Muslim citizens. They had been held in different facilities across Xinjiang. All described systematic indoctrination, mistreatment and torture. Similar testimony has been gathered by rights groups and journalists and is supported by numerous leaked government documents.

People were taken to the camps for exhibiting what the Chinese government deemed signs of extremism – and that could be almost anything. Praying at the local mosque, wearing a headscarf or growing a beard. Quitting smoking, travelling to see family members abroad or just receiving a phone call from a foreign number. Saying “God bless you”

[...]

Arrests came in the form of summons to a local police station or armed squads pounding on doors late at night. Detainees were driven to massive facilities then stripped of their clothing, jewellery and phones and given uniforms. They were put in crowded cells that sometimes had beds but often did not, and watched over by ceiling-mounted CCTV cameras. The cells were unbearably warm in summer and when winter came the detainees pressed together for warmth. They were given only brief access to toilets [...]. Food was meagre. Several described only a thin soup for each meal, sometimes with a small piece of bread. Others talked of even less and a terrible, gnawing hunger.

There were classes most days that involved sitting in cramped and silent rows listening to lectures on Chinese language or the legal system. Guards would make them memorise patriotic songs and elements of Xi Jinping Thought, the president’s political doctrine. There would be videos too, detailing Xi’s foreign policy achievements or the power of China’s military.

Medical attention came only in an emergency and sometimes not even then. Most detainees said they were given regular pills or injections, however. None of them knew what they were given but it fogged their minds, made them lethargic and seemed to disrupt the women’s menstrual cycles.

[...]

There was violence. Beatings with fists, boots and shock batons for the slightest infraction and sometimes for no reason at all. Detainees spoke often of the device known as the tiger chair that guards strapped people into for hours or days at a time. The worst punishments often seemed to be reserved for Uyghurs.

Women described suffering and witnessing sexual violence. One told me men in medical masks took women from the cells at night and that when it happened to her, she was raped and beaten by several guards.

[...]

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crosspostato da: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/36338295

Archived

[...]

Cotton has long been the focus of international responses to human rights abuses in Xinjiang. About a fifth of the world’s cotton originates from the region. In 2021, US customs banned the import of Xinjiang cotton and anything made with the raw material, such as clothes or shoes.

But Chinese advances in biotechnology mean Xinjiang cotton is being transformed into animal feed, which food multinationals and some of China’s biggest farmers are using to raise billions of chickens, pigs, cattle, fish and other animals. The breakthrough also helps China reduce its heavy dependence on US imports of protein, strengthening its hand in the rivalry between the two superpowers.

The Bureau of Investigative Journalism (TBIJ) has traced supply chains from Xinjiang all the way to the UK, and to factories that supply major international brands, including KFC and McDonald’s in China.

Some supply chains even involve forced labour and human rights abuses at multiple points. In at least one case, a company sources tainted cotton, makes poultry feed with a sanctioned paramilitary arm of the Xinjiang government, and then slaughters and processes its chickens in a factory using transferred ethnic minority workers.

[...]

The UN and rights watchdogs say Xinjiang labour transfers are coercive, state-imposed forced labour. A spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in the US said “allegations of ‘forced labour’ in Xinjiang are nothing but vicious lies concocted by anti-China forces”.

Members of all ethnic groups there “enjoy happy and fulfilling lives”, they said, adding that “Xinjiang-related issues are not human rights issues at all, but in essence about countering violent terrorism and separatism”. They said the UFLPA “seriously violates international law and basic norms governing international relations and grossly interferes in China’s internal affairs”.

[...]

Government programmes in the 2000s saw school children as young as eight sent to the fields each year. Xinjiang millennials on Douyin mourn childhoods spent picking cotton. “Look at this white cotton sea, this used to be my childhood nightmare,” says a Uyghur man walking in a cotton field in one video clip. “Oh, that’s really an unbearable past to look back on.”

Clips uploaded more recently show children are still working Xinjiang’s fields.

One video shows a single mother picking cotton with two young children. The trio harvested 151 kilograms for $21 the previous day, she tells the interviewer. “This video will be a disaster if it spreads abroad,” comments a netizen from the other side of China.

[...]

For more than 30 years, Beijing has worked to unlock the nutritional benefits of cottonseed. The state has poured billions into agricultural biotechnologies, according to a US government report last year.

For centuries, farmers have used cottonseed meal, a byproduct of cotton harvesting, as feed for adult cattle. But gossypol, a toxin, makes it a risky business for most other animals, including humans; it can cause infertility, stomach bleeding, heart failure and death.

Recent Chinese advances in biotechnology have changed this. Microbes are now used to detoxify cottonseed in fermentation tanks, and “turn waste into treasure”, as the website of Xinjiang Shipu Biotechnology puts it.

Last year, another feed source came to market when – after 14 years of research – a group in Xinjiang figured out how to ferment cotton straw into feed using “special bacteria” and other ingredients, including tomato skin residue.

These are important developments in the nation’s drive for food security. China consumes more meat than anywhere else in the world, and securing protein-rich ingredients for animal feed, like cottonseed, is seen as vital by Beijing.

[...]

During the Covid-19 pandemic, state media wrote that the government transferred “more than 240 young people from southern Xinjiang” to companies in the north including the Urumqi mill, as part of a “timely rain” of government assistance.

Evidence from social media and official reports also shows the Chinese government sending Xinjiang workers to at least one CP factory outside of Xinjiang. Hubei CP, which supplies chicken to McDonald’s and KFC in China, has taken transfer workers since at least 2019. TBIJ found that almost two dozen Uyghurs posted videos from the plant between 2022 and 2024.

[...]

McDonald’s website proudly claims that, in 2023, 100% of the soy used in poultry feed for its chickens was deforestation free. KFC aims to achieve the same across Europe by 2030. The moves are responses to EU legislation that comes into effect later this year.

Neither chain responded to questions about whether Xinjiang cotton was fed to chickens or other animals served in their restaurants.

[...]

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/35079508

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[...]

The Brazilian government believes it has sufficient room to increase import tariffs instead of resorting to more aggressive measures like quotas, should a wave of industrialized goods from China flood the local market. The risk of such a redirection to Brazil has grown in the wake of the global tariff escalation set off by U.S. President Donald Trump.

[...]

Since the beginning of the trade tensions, Brazil has been closely monitoring any potential uptick in the flow of Chinese-made goods to its domestic market, in an effort to “separate the wheat from the chaff.”

“It’s crucial that we base our actions on clear data: to determine whether there is indeed a flood of products or not,” said a Brazilian government official, who noted that so far, no significant increase has been observed.

[...]

If Chinese products do end up being rerouted to Brazil in large volumes, authorities see an increase in import duties as a more straightforward tool to deploy. The government source emphasized that there is legal leeway under both World Trade Organization (WTO) and Mercosur rules to implement such measures.

[...]

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34919089

Archived

In occupied Crimea, corrupt notaries are helping transfer ownership of Ukrainians’ apartments to Russian military personnel. It’s just one of several schemes the Kremlin-installed authorities are using to strip Ukrainians of their property — especially those who refused to take Russian citizenship.

[...]

The dispossession of property has become one of Russia’s tools for pushing Ukrainians out of Crimea. The Kremlin has led a sweeping campaign of so-called “nationalization,” which spiked in 2014–2015 and has since expanded in scope following Russia’s full-scale invasion.

“In 2022, they added a new category — citizens of so-called ‘unfriendly countries,’” said Mykyta Petrovets, a legal expert at Ukraine’s Regional Center for Human Rights. “That includes basically all European nations — and of course, Ukraine. If you oppose Russian aggression or support sanctions, your property can be confiscated on that basis alone.”

People on a beach in the Black Sea resort city of Yevpatoria, Crimea. April 29, 2025.

[...]

‘Erasing Ukrainian presence’

[...]

In March 2020, Vladimir Putin signed a decree designating nearly the entire [Crimean] peninsula as a so-called “border territory” of the Russian Federation — a move that banned “foreigners” from owning land in Crimea. According to legal expert Mykyta Petrovets, the decree became yet another tool for property dispossession.

“They gave landowners about a year to sell or transfer their property,” Petrovets said. “After that, the process became essentially forced sales through the courts. Now, many of these plots are being auctioned off.”

Under Ukrainian law, nothing has changed — Ukrainian citizens still legally own their land. But the Russian-installed authorities in Crimea have begun publishing lists of addresses and cadastral numbers for properties they intend to confiscate. According to documentation collected by the Regional Center for Human Rights, over the past three years, the number of Crimean land parcels registered to so-called “foreign nationals” has dropped by 50 percent — from over 11,000 to just 5,000.

[...]

After the annexation of Crimea in 2014, Ukraine’s Justice Ministry filed an inter-state lawsuit with the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), accusing Russia of systematic human rights violations in the occupied territory — including the illegal seizure of property. In June 2024, the court ruled in Ukraine’s favor. It declared Russia’s actions unlawful, including the imposition of Russian law in Crimea.

[...]

Meanwhile, Russian officials continue to publicize their efforts to seize and redistribute property in Crimea. Larisa Kulinich, the Russian-installed minister for property and land relations in Crimea, recently announced that 900 properties were “nationalized” in 2024. The sale of those assets, she claimed, brought 2.8 billion rubles ($34.9 million) into the regional budget. Many of the confiscated properties are now being offered as rewards to Russian soldiers fighting against Ukraine.

[...]

22
 
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34885845

Archived

Social media has been buzzing recently with claims that China has been dropping food and medical supplies to Gaza from the air.

The posts, which feature footage of a C-17 aircraft releasing pallets of aid, have been widely shared, with captions praising China’s humanitarian efforts and presenting it as a contrast to Western inaction. However, a closer look at the evidence shows that these claims are simply not true.

[...]

The viral videos and images typically show a C-17 aircraft performing airdrops. Social media users, including popular profiles on TikTok, have posted messages claiming that the Chinese Air Force flew over Egypt to deliver aid to Gaza. One widely circulated post stated: “Chinese airforce flew over Egypt to reach Gaza to provide humanitarian aid.” Others paint China as a humanitarian powerhouse, taking bold action where others haven’t.

[...]

The problem with these claims? China doesn’t even operate the C-17 aircraft. The C-17 Globemaster III is a large military transport plane used mainly by the United States and several allied countries, but not by China. That fact alone should be enough to raise doubts.

[...]

Investigations into the footage reveal that most of the clips circulating online actually show a United States aid airdrop over Beit Lahiya, northern Gaza, from March 2024. The same tower and parachutes seen in the misleading videos confirm that these clips have been repurposed to create a false narrative. This key detail debunks the notion that Chinese planes were involved.

[...]

Despite the dramatic presentation, there’s no credible evidence that Chinese planes have been involved in any airdrop missions to Gaza.

23
 
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34854176

"Since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, investigators from the National Police of Ukraine have initiated 154,153 criminal proceedings for crimes committed on Ukrainian territory by servicemen of the armed forces of the Russian Federation and their accomplices," a statement reads.

According to the Ukrainian National Police:

  • 137,828 cases were opened under Article 438 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine (war crimes);
  • 9,340 under Article 110 (encroachment on the territorial integrity and inviolability of Ukraine);
  • 4,430 under Article 111-1 (collaborative activities);
  • 324 under Article 111 (high treason), among others.

[...]

24
 
 

Cross posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34812757

Archived

Ukrainians, regardless of age, gender, and profession, were abducted or persecuted in all territories occupied by Russia. Over 80% of these individuals experienced violence and were illegally detained in inhumane conditions, as reported by the Media Initiative for Human Rights (MIHR).

[...]

Initially, people were held at pumping stations, enterprises, in railway station buildings, schools, etc. Russians also kept Ukrainians in pits at their own positions or in the middle of fields. Subsequently, the prisoners were transferred to police stations, temporary detention facilities, or prisons in the temporarily occupied territories (TOT). Later, the occupiers attempted to transfer as many civilians as possible to Russia.

According to the MIHR, Russia currently holds at least 1,908 Ukrainian civilians. There, Ukrainians can remain for years without any legal status or/ and incommunicado (without the ability to contact their relatives). Russia is initiating criminal cases against some individuals on fabricated charges. During their detention, people are tortured to confess to “crimes” they did not commit, as well as for the amusement of their captors.

[...]

25
 
 

Cross posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34808510

Sharing a dirty cell with a dozen others, constant sleep deprivation, cells with lights on 24-hours a day; poor hygiene and forced labour. These are some of what prisoners in Chinese jails are subjected to, according to Australian citizen Matthew Radalj, who spent five years at the Beijing No 2 prison – a facility used for international inmates.

Radalj, who is now living outside China, has decided to go public about his experience, and described undergoing and witnessing severe physical punishment, forced labour, food deprivation and psychological torture.

[...]

"I was in really bad shape when I arrived. They beat me for two days straight in the first police station that I was in. I hadn't slept or eaten or had water for 48 hours and then I was forced to sign a big stack of documents," said Radalj of his introduction to imprisonment in China, which began with his arrest on 2 January, 2020.

The former Beijing resident claims he was wrongfully convicted after a fight with shopkeepers at an electronics market, following a dispute over the agreed price to fix a mobile phone screen.

He claims he ended up signing a false confession to robbery, after being told it would be pointless to try to defend his innocence in a system with an almost 100% criminal conviction rate and in the hope that this would reduce the time of his incarceration.

Court documents indicate that this worked at least to some extent, earning him a four-year sentence.

Once in prison, he said he first had to spend many months in a separate detention centre where he was subjected to a more brutal "transition phase".

[...]

During this time prisoners must follow extremely harsh rules in what he described as horrific conditions.

"We were banned from showering or cleaning ourselves, sometimes for months at a time. Even the toilet could be used only at specific allotted times, and they were filthy - waste from the toilets above would constantly drip down on to us."

[...]

The "good behaviour points system" [...] was a way – at least in theory – to reduce your sentence.

Prisoners could obtain a maximum of 100 good behaviour points per month for doing things like studying Communist Party literature, working in the prison factory or snitching on other prisoners. Once 4,200 points were accumulated, they could in theory be used to reduce prison time.

If you do the maths, that would mean a prisoner would have to get maximum points every single month for three-and-half years before this could start to work.

Radalj said that in reality it was used as a means of psychological torture and manipulation.

He claims the guards would deliberately wait till an inmate had almost reached this goal and then penalise them on any one of a huge list of possible infractions which would cancel out points at the crucial time.

These infractions included - but were not limited to - hoarding or sharing food with other prisoners, walking "incorrectly" in the hallway by straying from a line painted on the ground, hanging socks on a bed incorrectly, or even standing too close to the window.

[...]

Former British prisoner Peter Humphrey, who spent two years in detention in Shanghai, said his facility had a similar points calculation and reduction system which was manipulated to control prisoners and block sentence reductions.

"There were cameras everywhere, even three to a cell," he said. "If you crossed a line marked on the ground and were caught by a guard or on camera, you would be punished. The same if you didn't make your bed properly to military standard or didn't place your toothbrush in the right place in the cell.

"There was also group pressure on prisoners with entire cell groups punished if one prisoner did any of these things."

One ex-inmate told the BBC that in his five years in prison, he never once saw the points actually used to mitigate a sentence.

Radalj said that there were a number of prisoners - including himself - who didn't bother with the points system.

So authorities resorted to other means of applying psychological pressure.

These included cutting time off monthly family phone calls or the reduction of other perceived benefits.

[...]

But the most common daily punishment involved the reduction of food.

The BBC has been told by numerous former inmates that the meals at Beijing's No 2 prison were mostly made up of cabbage in dirty water which sometimes also had bits of carrot and, if they were lucky, small slivers of meat.

[...]

To make things worse, they were made to work on a "farm", where they did manage to grow a lot of vegetables, but were never allowed to eat them.

Radalj said the farm was displayed to a visiting justice minister as an example of how impressive prison life was.

But, he said, it was all for show.

"We would be growing tomatoes, potatoes, cabbages and okra and then – at the end of the season – they would push it all into a big hole and bury it," he added.

[...]

Another prisoner said they would occasionally suddenly receive protein, like a chicken leg, to make their diet look better when officials visited the prison.

[...]

"You start to go crazy, whether you like it or not, and that's what solitary is designed to do… So you've got to decide very quickly whether your room is really, really small, or really, really big.

"After four months, you just start talking to yourself all the time. The guards would come by and ask 'Hey, are you okay?'. And you're like, 'why?'. They replied, 'because you're laughing'."

Then, Radalj said, he would respond, in his own mind: "It's none of your business."

[...]

Another feature of Chinese prison life, according to Radalji, was the fake "propaganda" moments officials would stage for Chinese media or visiting officials to paint a rosy picture of conditions there.

He said, at one point, a "computer suite" was set up. "They got everyone together and told us that we'd get our own email address and that we would be able to send emails. They then filmed three Nigerian guys using these computers."

The three prisoners apparently looked confused because the computers were not actually connected to the internet - but the guards had told them to just "pretend".

"Everything was filmed to present a fake image of prisoners with access to computers," Radalj said.

But, he claims, soon after the photo opportunity, the computers were wrapped up in plastic and never touched again.

[...]

Radalj said many of the prisoners had no way of letting their families know they were in jail.

[...]

[After he was released from prison], just before he had boarded the plane in Beijing a policeman who had escorted him to the gate had used Radalj's boarding pass to buy duty free cigarettes for his mates.

"He said don't come back to China. You're banned for 10 years. And I said 'yeah cool. Don't smoke. It's bad for your health'".

The officer laughed.

[...]

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