State Dept determination, 1/19/2021, that PRC policies in Xinjiang Uyghur Region comprise genocide and crimes against humanity is important. Below, first, essentials, then I'll discuss Pompeo's lies in the statement (a thread for the record) 1/22 bit.ly/3nTi5ig
This follows a November Biden campaign statement calling the policies in Xinjiang "genocide," so we can expect the new administration will continue to endorse this determination once it takes office tomorrow 2/22. axios.com/biden-campaign…
To be more than rhetoric, however, such a determination must serve a strategic purpose. Hopefully, will help Biden admin rally other nations to collectively condemn PRC treatment of Uyghurs and others. EU, Britain have trade deals with PRC pending; they should think again. 3/22
Crucially, the determination IDs "crimes against humanity" as well as "genocide" in the Uyghur Region. What's happening in Xinjiang clearly meets at least 3 of the 5 criteria of genocide as defined in the 1948 UN Convention on Crime of Genocide 4/22 bit.ly/2M3xzDd
But that convention's Article II requires that the acts be committed with "intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group," which may be a hard standard to prove. 5/22
Crimes against humanity, on the other hand, are defined more concretely by the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, Article 7. There is copious evidence that many of the acts enumerated in this statute have been taking place in Xinjiang. 6/22
Moreover, countries that are members of the International Criminal Court, notably Tajikistan, have been party to refoulements of Uyghurs back to the PRC where they are subject to persecution and crimes against humanity. 7/22 bit.ly/35WUirp
This, according to some international law experts, gives the ICC standing to hear cases regarding crimes against humanity in Xinjiang, even though the PRC is not a member of the ICC. Now--my criticism of Pompeo's hypocrisy and disingenuous bullshit: 8/22
Pompeo, who today accused PRC of international crimes, opposes international legal institutions and twice threatened the Internat'l Criminal Court for doing its job looking into crimes in Afghanistan and Palestine. 9/22 hrw.org/news/2020/05/2…
Also, Pompeo claims "For the past four years, this Administration has exposed the nature of the Chinese Communist Party and called it what it is: a Marxist-Leninist regime that exerts power over the long-suffering Chinese people through brainwashing and brute force." 10/22
But in fact, Pompeo's boss Trump and his admin PREVENTED Congress from acting for 2 1/2 critical years. A Uyghur human rights act passed the Senate in Nov. 2018 11/22 congress.gov/bill/115th-con…
It was followed by similar bipartisan bills in House and Senate through 2019. All blocked by Trump's administration, which thought that attention to human rights would upset prospects for a trade deal— 12/22
--a trade deal to resolve the tariff crisis Trump himself unilaterally created and which has achieved nothing (China to US trade deficit now higher than when Trump took office; US citizens paid billions in taxes). 13/22 cnn.com/2020/10/24/eco…
Treasury Secr Steve Mnuchin reportedly led opposition to US doing anything to help Uyghurs. Trump meanwhile told his staff that concentration camps for Uyghurs were just fine: he did so twice, in 2017... 14/22 washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/…
and Trump verbally approved of China putting Uyghurs in concentration camps in 2018 15/22 washingtonpost.com/politics/2020/…
In June 2019 at Osaka G20 Trump told Xi Jinping that Trump had no objections to Uyghurs in concentration camps, according to Trump's own former National Security Adviser, John Bolton 16/22 independent.co.uk/news/world/ame…
Only in spring of 2020 LESS THAN ONE YEAR AGO the bipartisan Uyghur Human Rights Act was allowed to come up for a vote, pass Congress, and Trump signed it. 17/22 congress.gov/bill/116th-con…
Although there were good people in the US government working on this issue through that whole period, despite the unconscionable active and passive support for PRC repression of Uyghurs by Trump himself, don't give Pompeo or Trump credit for this for determination today. 18/22
And PLEASE don't keep saying Trump was "tough on China." It was bluster, incoherence, petulance w/ absolute failure to do meaningful things even on economics, thanks largely to dissing allies and economic dumbfuckery re trade deficits 19/22
Pompeo lies that "this administration" exposed atrocities in XJ. No, it was journalists, researchers and victims who from 2017 exposed the camps, birth suppression, separation of children from families, forced labor etc. years before Trump flipped on his "good friend" Xi 20/22
Today's finding of genocide and crimes against humanity in the Uyghur Region will be good if it actually helps. 21/22
But a loose cannon careens port then starboard on a rudderless ship. A broken clock is right twice a day. Don't credit rump Trump architects of chaotic China policy for eleventh hour gestures they first opposed for years. 22/22

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More from @JimMillward

18 Jan
This needs to be explained. The Covid reasons explain foreign places: Hing Kong, Macao, Taiwan. It does not explain excluding Uyghurs (next)
Is there an outbreak in Xinjiang? Not reported. And Uyghurs are only one component of Xinjiang’s population. So Uyghurs are forbidden for a different reason.
There seems to be a blanket prohibition on Uyghurs at public and tourist sites across China. I recently heard a cab driver say that Uyghurs are not allowed to visit 3 Gorges Dam—“it’s said they cause trouble 据说他们作乱 “ was his reason.
Read 4 tweets
15 Nov 20
Coordinated disruption of Brandeis webinar on Xinjiang: a thread. web.archive.org/web/2020111504…
Link above is archived version of a letter sent to Brandeis Chinese students by the Chinese Students and Scholars Association. It says the event would disrespect Chinese people (forgetting the Uyghurs are also Chinese people?) and that critical academic events are inappropriate.
There's a template in English at the bottom for letters to be sent to Brandeis president and, interestingly, to the University Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion. Indeed, those offices received these letters, but of course did not cancel the event as the letters asked.
Read 17 tweets
15 Nov 20
Some too-loose writing by @nyt @KatherineKornei about early horse riding in Xinjiang. Mistake is saying that Xinjiang in 350 BCE was "China": it wasn't politically, and it wasn't culturally. (Thread)
nytimes.com/2020/11/13/sci…
Story says scientists found "oldest direct evidence of horseback riding in China" and implies this is riding by Chinese or proto Chinese, in contrast to "neighboring civilization" in Mongolia. But western boundaries of Zhou and Qin empire were some 1700 km east of these burials.
People in Shirenzigou and Xigou were "neighboring" proto-China too, just like Mongolia was. So these were not Chinese horse burials, but burials found in PRC. Abstract in Proc of the Nat'l Acad of Science @PNASNews makes the same mistake pnas.org/content/early/….
Read 11 tweets
29 Oct 20
Zoom is at it again. Last summer it cancelled meetings about Tiananmen and Hong Kong. Now it has cancelled university meetings about Palestine (SFSU) and meetings about the cancelation (U Hawaii Manoa) and NYU. mesana.org/advocacy/lette…
A third party service provider simply cannot be allowed to determine content on our campuses. If they say their corporate policies require them to do so, our university policies must require us to cancel our contracts. There are other providers of the same services.
Note that while Zoom is censoring just as it did China-related content last summer, this time there is no excuse of obeying "local laws" from authoritarian countries. The security / accessibility problem in authoritarian countries is a tough question since all providers face it.
Read 7 tweets
5 Oct 20
Chinese student jailed for his social media activity while a student at Minnesota. This is a test for University of Minnesota @UMNews --and other universities who should join in solidarity and strength: axios.com/china-arrests-…
I assume and hope Minnesota @UMNews is working behind the scenes on this student's behalf, providing legal aid, involving US State Dept., tapping alumni in PRC, opening back doors, whatever is possible and advisable. But
There are other levers: University of Minnesota @UMNews has a Chinese Visiting Scholars Initiative that should at least be brought up in these conversations. How can we encourage scholars to come to US if they will be arrested upon their return? chinacenter.umn.edu/funding/visiti…
Read 10 tweets
24 Sep 20
Interesting thread here from Sheena Greitens about distinguishing between Uyghur Region and Tibet region indoctrination and coercive labor policies. But I think “security” in the wrong lens to see this through. (Thread)
If viewed as attempts aimed at ethnic assimilation in PRC colonies, the common denominator of both XUAR and TAR policies is clear. Neither people present serious threats to security other than in the colonies themselves. But after 70 years, persistent
Tibetanness of Tibetans confounds Xi’s CCP. They have abandoned pluralist multi-minzu approaches of the early CCP in favor of coercive assimilationism. Turning farmers and herders into regimented factory workers is the method de jour, sold as poverty alleviation. Again,
Read 7 tweets

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