‘Very Credible Case’ Chinese Regime Carried out Genocide Against Uyghurs: UK Lawyers

‘Very Credible Case’ Chinese Regime Carried out Genocide Against Uyghurs: UK Lawyers
Police patrol a village in Hotan prefecture, in China's Xinjiang region, on Feb. 17, 2018. (Ben Dooley/AFP via Getty Images)
Lily Zhou
2/8/2021
Updated:
2/8/2021

A group of London barristers on Monday published a “landmark” legal opinion concluding that there’s a “very credible case” that the Chinese regime has committed genocide against the Uyghur people in Xinjiang.

This first formal legal opinion on the Chinese regime’s treatment of Uyghurs came a day before a crucial vote in Parliament on an amendment which aims to stop and prevent the UK from doing bilateral trade with genocidal countries.
“On the basis of the evidence we have seen, this opinion concludes that there is a very credible case that acts carried out by the Chinese government against the Uyghur people in XUAR [Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region] amount to crimes against humanity and the crime of genocide,” the document (pdf), authored by barristers from Essex Court Chambers, reads.

Based on Article 7 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, the document said, “there is sufficient evidence to amount to an arguable case” for crimes against humanity, including enslavement, imprisonment or other severe deprivation of physical liberty, torture, rape, enforced sterilisation, persecution, and enforced disappearance.

The barristers argued that there is also sufficient evidence that genocide has been committed against Uyghur people in Xinjiang based on Article 6 of the same law.

“This is a landmark moment for Uyghurs,” Rahima Mahmut, UK director of the World Uyghur Congress (WUC), said in a statement.

“The finding is clear: there is an intent to destroy Uyghurs,” she added.

The WUC is one of the organisations that worked on obtaining the legal opinion, along with legal NGO the Global Legal Action Network (GLAN) and the Uyghur Human Rights Project (UHRP).

A guard tower and barbed wire fences are seen around a section of the Artux City Vocational Skills Education Training Service Center in Artux in western China's Xinjiang region on Dec. 3, 2018. (AP Photo)
A guard tower and barbed wire fences are seen around a section of the Artux City Vocational Skills Education Training Service Center in Artux in western China's Xinjiang region on Dec. 3, 2018. (AP Photo)

Siobhan Allen, legal officer with GLAN, called the document “groundbreaking.”

“This groundbreaking legal opinion concludes that the atrocities occurring in XUAR credibly reach the level of severity and systematicity required to constitute crimes against humanity and genocide,” she said.

“This finding makes it impossible for responsible governments to continue treating China as a normal member of the international community,” Peter Irwin, senior communications officer at the UHRP said.

“Whether it’s the 2022 Beijing Olympics or Volkswagen building vehicles a few miles from an internment camp, governments and global businesses will need to reassess their relationship with Beijing until this kind of treatment ends,” he added.

“History will not treat them kindly if they favour business in a time of genocide.”

Genocide Amendment

The UK’s House of Commons is due to vote on Tuesday on a series of amendments to its post-Brexit trade bill, including a so-called “genocide amendment.” A previous version of the amendment had been defeated in the Commons by only 11 votes.
The modified amendment won a two-thirds majority last week in the House of Lords. Imran Ahmad Khan, chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Foreign Affairs told NTD on Thursday that he felt there had been “significant and growing support in both houses.”

If the amendment is passed, UK courts will be the first domestic courts that have the power to determine whether a country has committed genocide. If such a determination is made, a minister must arrange a motion for debate in each house of Parliament requiring the government to set out its course of action, which may include stopping negotiations or withdrawing from a trade deal with that country.

The government opposes the amendment, saying it is unnecessary and ineffective. It proposed an alternative amendment (pdf) giving the task of reporting evidence of genocide to a “responsible committee.”

However, MPs argued that select committees already have the power to do so and have already done so, and the government has taken no action.

“A select committee can, if it wish to, produce a report of genocide, as it can now. But it is meaningless when the government has said repeatedly that the only time that they will accept, use, recognize the term genocide, is when it has been discussed, debated, evaluated, and come to a determination in a judicial setting,” MP Nusrat Ghani said in a virtual press conference when asked why she couldn’t accept the government’s compromise amendment.

Sir Iain Duncan Smith, one of the proponents of the genocide amendment, posted a video on Twitter showing a montage of government officials saying a determination of genocide is a judicial matter, in an effort to persuade more MPs to support the amendment.