Newstral
Article
South China Morning Post on 2019-12-19 09:10
China’s envoy to Australia dismisses mass detention of Uygurs in Xinjiang as ‘fake news’
Related news
- SWhy does China’s treatment of Uygurs in Xinjiang get more attention in Australia than Canberra’s detention of asylum seekers?scmp.com
- Japan gave US and UK intelligence on China’s crackdown on Uygurs in Xinjiang: sourceSouth China Morning Post
- AP looks inside China’s largest detention center in Xinjiangartesianews.com
- Secret papers reveal workings of China’s Xinjiang detention campsAl Jazeera
- A look inside China’s largest detention center in Xinjiangstaradvertiser.com
- Muslim Pakistan says outcry over China’s Xinjiang detention camps has been ‘sensationalised’South China Morning Post
- New cache of Xinjiang papers ‘a manual for China’s detention camps’South China Morning Post
- China’s new envoy to Britain calls for reset in relations amid Hong Kong, Xinjiang tensionsSouth China Morning Post
- Biden links policies targeting Uygurs in Xinjiang to the HolocaustSouth China Morning Post
- British parliament declares Uygurs are suffering ‘genocide’ in XinjiangSouth China Morning Post
- China possibly committed ‘genocide’ against Xinjiang Uygurs, says US commissionSouth China Morning Post
- NBA player Rudy Gobert shows support for Uygurs in XinjiangSouth China Morning Post
- Xinjiang: no family planning policy targeting Uygurs, Beijing saysSouth China Morning Post
- Spotlight on China’s XinjiangSouth China Morning Post
- Australia ‘deeply disappointed’ over China’s detention of author Yang HengjunSouth China Morning Post
- UN human rights chief due in Xinjiang this year, says China’s envoy amid concerns over stage-managed visitsSouth China Morning Post
- Coronavirus: Australia calls China’s envoy over ‘disappointing’ remarksSouth China Morning Post
- China’s envoy to Australia says 2 nations at ‘new juncture’Seattle Times
- Mike Pompeo denounces China’s ‘awful abuses’ of detained Muslim UygursSouth China Morning Post
- Pope Francis, for first time, says China’s Uygurs are ‘persecuted’South China Morning Post