Long-Awaited Uyghur Human Rights Report Due This Month 

International human rights organizations such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch as well as countries including the U.S. accused China of human rights abuses against Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims in Xinjiang. The accusations include mass arbitrary incarceration of Muslims in internment camps, forced labor, forced sterilization of women, and forced separation of school-aged children from their parents.

US Holocaust Museum Reaffirms China’s Crimes Against Humanity in Xinjiang

“The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum is gravely concerned that the Chinese government may be committing genocide against the Uyghurs,” the report says. “The Chinese government is failing in its legal obligation to prevent this crime. The seriousness of the assault on the Uyghur population demands the immediate response of the international community to protect the victims.”

Investors ‘Sell’ Chinese Tech Stocks as Beijing Continues Crackdown

China’s tech crackdown came to the fore last year when Alibaba founder Jack Ma gave a speech that October apparently criticizing the country’s financial system. Since then, Beijing has increased scrutiny on over 30 domestic tech firms which include big names like Baidu, Tencent, JD.com, Didi, and Meituan. 

An International Public Hearing on Xinjiang, in Taiwan

Chairman of the US, House China Task Force, Congressman Michael McCaul urged Taiwan to join the democratic world in its growing condemnation of CCP actions in Xinjiang, noting its own unique “front row seat” on economic blackmail, territorial aggression and efforts to stamp out democratic governments and personal freedoms

Huawei Has Technology to Recognize Uyghur Faces: The Evidence

IPVM, the world’s leading authority on video surveillance, discovered an internal Huawei document that, by purpose or mistake, was freely available on Huawei’s European website. Immediately after IPVM asked Huawei for explanations, the document disappeared.

US, European Officials Raise Awareness for Missing Chinese Human Rights Lawyer

Gao, a self-taught lawyer and a devoted Christian, has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize three times. He began practicing law in 1996, defending victims of government land seizures; families of miners, who are seeking compensation after their loved ones died in coal mining accidents; as well as persecuted Christians and adherents of Falun Gong.