February 6, 2022
1 min read

Imran in Beijing backs China on Xinjiang, Tibet, Hong Kong

Islamabad’s support to Beijing against the accusation of human rights violation by China in the Xinjiang region came at a time when recently 243 global groups called for action against China over human rights abuses in the country….reports Asian Lite News

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan has turned blind eye to the accusations of West and rights groups against China over suppressing Uyghur Muslims in Xinjiang as he supported Beijing on Xinjiang issue on Sunday and the leader also backed the communist regime on the South China Sea as well as One-China Principle.

“The Pakistan side expressed its “commitment to One-China Policy and support for China on Taiwan, South China Sea, Hong Kong, Xinjiang and Tibet,” read a joint statement released following the meeting of Imran Khan and Chinese Presiden Xi Jinping in Beijing on Sunday.

Islamabad gave its support to China on issues related to the One China Policy and the South China Sea, which the West sees as arbitrary rules policies made by Beijing to foster its expansionist approach.

“The Chinese side reaffirmed its support for Pakistan in safeguarding its sovereignty, independence and security, as well as promoting its socio-economic development and prosperity,” it added.

Islamabad’s support to Beijing against the accusation of human rights violation by China in the Xinjiang region came at a time when recently 243 global groups called for action against China over human rights abuses in the country.

The groups in late January had urged the countries to join the diplomatic boycott of the Winter Olympic Games.

Under President Xi Jinping, Chinese authorities have been committing mass abuses against Uyghurs, Tibetans, ethnic groups, and religious believers from all independent faith groups said the Human Rights Watch in late January.

They have eliminated independent civil society by persecuting human rights activists, feminists, lawyers, journalists, and others. The government has eviscerated a once-vibrant civil society in Hong Kong, expanded tech-enabled surveillance to significantly curtail the rights to expression, association, and peaceful assembly, and allowed the use of forced labour, in violation of international law, the Human Rights Watch added. (ANI)

ALSO READ: Argentina officially joins China’s Belt and Road Initiative

Previous Story

Argentina officially joins China’s Belt and Road Initiative

Next Story

UN to continue Afghan aid amid challenges

Latest from -Top News

Grave Horror in Lanka

Suspicions are mounting that the body remains may belong to civilians who disappeared during the brutal civil war between government forces and Tamil Tiger rebels, which raged from 1983 until its bloody

US General Axed Over Trump Clash

Lt Gen. Kruse is the latest high-ranking official to be removed under the second Trump administration and the second senior military intelligence leader to be ousted….reports Asian Lite News The Pentagon has

London Puts Beijing on Hold

The proposed embassy, earmarked for the site of a historic two-century-old building near the Tower of London, has been bogged down in dispute for more than three years…reports Asian Lite News The

Hands Off City Cash, Judge Tells Trump

The court’s latest order underscores a growing judicial pushback against efforts by the Trump administration to penalize sanctuary communities….reports Asian Lite News A federal judge in San Francisco has ruled that the

Pentagon restricts Ukraine’s use of US missiles

The disclosure comes as President Donald Trump grows increasingly frustrated at his failure to deliver a breakthrough in the three-year-old conflict…reports Asian Lite News The United States is quietly preventing Ukraine from
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Will not bow down, says Imran ahead of no-trust vote

Khan also said that external elements are trying to defame

Tibet among issues discussed during Pelosi’s Taiwan visit

Representative Gyaltsen further attested that the decades-long genocide in Tibet