China urges Canada to reflect on its own human rights abuses, stop hyping Xinjiang-related topics

Jun 27, 2021 10:35:44 PM
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China urges Canada to reflect on its own human rights abuses, stop hyping Xinjiang-related topics

(Global Times) 11:20, June 24, 2021

China urges Canada to reflect on its own human rights abuses, stop hyping Xinjiang-related topics

Children's shoes are placed on the staircase outside Vancouver Art Gallery during a memorial event for the 215 children whose remains have been found buried at a former Kamloops residential school in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, May 29, 2021.(Photo: Xinhua)

By taking the lead to aggressively hype anti-China topics recently, especially by releasing a joint statement on China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, Canada will benefit nothing but only further damage ties with China while exposing its own hypocrisy and double standards on human rights, analysts said.

There was quite a battle on the second dayof the 47th session of the United Nations Human Rights Council on Tuesday. On behalf of a group of countries, China expressed concerns about serious human rights violations against indigenous people in Canadaand called for a thorough and impartial investigation into all cases where crimes were committed. Canada, on the other hand, released a joint statement hyping China's Xinjiang topics.

The finding of the remains of 215 indigenous children who were in a former residential school, the Kamloops Indian Residential School in British Columbia, believed to have housed 500 indigenous Canadian children, has attracted international attention on Canada's crimes against indigenous people.

"We are deeply concerned about serious human rights violations against the indigenous people in Canada. Historically, Canada robbed the indigenous people of their land, killed them, and eradicated their culture. The entire world was shocked to learn recent discovery of the remains of over 200 indigenous children at a Canadian boarding school," Minister Jiang Duan from China's mission to the UN in Geneva said on Tuesday, on behalf of a group of countries.

China urges Canada to reflect on its own human rights abuses, stop hyping Xinjiang-related topics

Canada's Stained Human Rights Record. Graphic: Jin Jianyu

Between the 1830s and 1990s, over 150,000 indigenous children in Canada were reported to have been forcibly taken away from their parents and sent to boarding schools. They were subjected to malnutrition, and many fell victims to abuse and rape. At least 4,000 children died of diseases, neglect, accidents or abuse while at schools.

"We call for a thorough and impartial investigation into all cases where crimes were committed against the indigenous people, especially children, so as to bring those responsible to justice, and offer full remedy to victims," said Jiang.

Apart from these crimes from the past, Jiang also said, "We are deeply concerned about discrimination against migrants in Canada and inhumane treatment of them in Canadian detention centers. From 2006 to 2014 alone, tens of thousands of migrants were arbitrarily detained by Canada."

"We are also deeply concerned over the illegal killings of civilians by Canadian overseas military servicemen and systemic racial discrimination, xenophobia, and Islamophobia within Canada," Jiang said.

"We urge Canada to immediately stop violations of human rights, and call on the Human Rights Council, the OHCHR and relevant Special Procedures, to keep following the human rights issues in Canada."

Despite facts and data provided in China's joint statement, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau quibbled in his response.

According to Reuters, the Canadian leader said a Canadian truth and reconciliation commission had worked from 2008 to 2015 to address the mistreatment of the indigenous population. Then he asked where China's truth and reconciliation commission was.

It seems that Trudeau has been cut to the quick by China's rare condemnation of Canada at the UN human Rights body, analysts said, noting that an investigation on crimes against the indigenous people, which seems to last forever, gives Canada no moral high ground to blatantly accuse others.

But speculation cannot replace evidence and lies cannot hide the truth, Zhu Ying, a professor on international laws from Southwest University of Political Science and Law, told the Global Times

China didn't take the same path of development as these Western countries, and it won't make the mistakes they have made, Zhu said.

He suggested that Trudeau should carefully read the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in order to get a better idea of the nature of human rights. Zhu also said Trudeau should learn how to deal with his own problems before he starts pointing fingers at other countries.

"Mr Trudeau needs to calm down. It is better to finally release the investigation results and admit Canada's own mistakes and make sincere repentance," Zhu said.

For a long time, Canada has self-claimed to be a "model student of human rights" and has been obsessed with lecturing and remarking on other countries' human rights conditions. Recently, China has been its main focus. For example, in March, Canada imposed sanction against Chinese officials and companies for "human rights violations" in China's Xinjiang.

China urges Canada to reflect on its own human rights abuses, stop hyping Xinjiang-related topics

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