IPSE'S AUTHORS LAST 24h
Check all the Authors in the last 24h
IPSEs IN THE LAST 24H
  • Sue Mi Terry
    Sue Mi Terry “Now is not the time to lift sanctions, either. Now, in fact, is the time to double down. If Biden wants to prevent North Korea from acting out, he needs to first provide the government with new incentives to talk-and that means new restrictions Washington can use as carrots. Biden, in other words, needs to take North Korean policy off autopilot and launch a proactive effort to deter Pyongyang. Otherwise, he risks encouraging an already emboldened Kim to stage a major provocation.” 14 hours ago
  • Christopher Cavoli
    Christopher Cavoli “Russians don't have the numbers necessary to do a strategic breakthrough. More to the point, they don't have the skill and capability to do it, to operate at the scale necessary to exploit any breakthrough to strategic advantage. They do have the ability to make local advances and they have done some of that.” 15 hours ago
  • Nazar Voloshin
    Nazar Voloshin “The situation in the Kharkiv sector remains complicated but is evolving in a dynamic manner. Our defence forces have partially stabilised the situation. The advance of the enemy in certain zones and localities has been halted.” 20 hours ago
  • Volodymyr Zelenskiy
    Volodymyr Zelenskiy “The situation in the Kharkiv region is generally under control, and our soldiers are inflicting significant losses on the occupier. However, the area remains extremely difficult.” 20 hours ago
  • Bezalel Smotrich
    Bezalel Smotrich “Defense Minister Gallant announced today his support for the establishment of a Palestinian terrorist state as a reward for terrorism and Hamas for the most terrible massacre of the Jewish people since the Holocaust.” 20 hours ago
  • Yoav Gallant
    Yoav Gallant “I must reiterate … I will not agree to the establishment of Israeli military rule in Gaza. Israel must not establish civilian rule in Gaza.” 20 hours ago
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Human rights in China

Page with all the IPSEs stored in the archive related to the Context Human rights in China.
The IPSEs are presented in chronological order based on when the IPSEs have been pronounced.

“This is by far the most important leak of evidence from the region and the largest and the most significant. It's much more significant than anything we've seen before because it contains evidence on so many levels.”

author
Senior Fellow in China Studies at Victims of Communism
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“Countries do not need patronising lecturers; still less should human rights issues be politicised and used as a tool to apply double standards, or as a pretext to interfere in the internal affairs of other countries.”

author
President of the People's Republic of China
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“The severe repression that China has rolled out in Xinjiang, in Tibet, in Hong Kong has all taken place since 2015 the year that the Olympic delegates awarded Beijing the Games. The I.O.C. would be within its right to say that these issues have to be addressed. They haven't.”

author
Director of Global Initiatives at Human Rights Watch
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“We are starting to slowly see different and important actors say 'there are going to be consequences, there are going to be costs'. Governments that are clearly shown to be committing crimes against humanity must face consequences. It shouldn't matter that it's the second-most powerful nation on earth: no state is above the law.”

author
China director at Human Rights Watch
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“From the growing of cotton to the production of solar energy, widespread forced labour abuses in the Uyghur Region have tainted supply chains worldwide. Meanwhile, the Chinese government exploits trade dependency as a vulnerability - threatening punitive economic measures against those who refuse to acquiesce. Governments must now work urgently to enforce the upholding of human rights across international supply chains, including those set out by the International Labour Organization. Firms operating in the Uyghur Region, Tibet and elsewhere in China must be held accountable for efforts to remove such abuses from their supply chains.”

author
Statement by Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China (IPAC)
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“Last week, we saw President Biden, so-called social and community leaders and corporations alike cave to lies about Georgia's new election law. Lies being spread by radical Democrats and the woke left mob. Biden supports moving the MLB game out of Georgia, yet refuses to call on the International Olympic Committee to move the Olympics out of Communist China – which is committing a genocide against the Uyghurs. Biden and the Democrats need to be called out for their hypocrisy and face some pretty basic facts: Election security is not racist. Genocide is wrong. General Secretary Xi's atrocious acts can't be ignored and Communist China can't be allowed to whitewash its crimes on an international stage. President Biden has immense power to help facilitate the relocation of the games, which I have urged him to do. If Biden truly stands for human rights, he will immediately begin this process by offering to host the games in the United States and providing the necessary federal resources to get this done. The American spirit is undefeated and there is no limit to what this great nation can accomplish when united under a common cause. It is now time for President Biden to lead America and the world and make clear that the United States will never tolerate the oppression and genocide occurring in Communist China.”

author
Republican senator for Florida
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“Human rights is a universal value, so many countries are very concerned about the forced labor of Uighurs and other Muslims in China's Xinjiang region and their human rights. Chinese authorities should explain the situation and clarify their concerns, rather than stir up nationalism as its response to global society.”

author
Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator in Taiwan
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“The trade war between the US and China will certainly continue, but China still has to improve its human rights record. Anti-China sentiment will still be a global trend for the next 15 years. I don't know what China is trying to do, but Taiwanese are not happy with whatever China is doing to the nation, including its unilateral decision to ban imports of pineapples from Taiwan, frequently having Chinese aircraft enter Taiwan's air defense identification zone and not allowing Taiwan to enter the WHO.”

author
Mayor of Taipei
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“Freedom, democracy, human rights and prosperity are the principles and values that the KMT holds in its view on cross-strait and international controversies. Whether it be the Han people, Uighurs or other ethnic minorities, labor rights and religious rights should be guaranteed and respected. People in Taiwan have very limited knowledge about what is happening in Xinjiang, so Chinese authorities and the parties concerned should make information transparent, enabling more people to understand the working and living conditions of cotton farmers in Xinjiang, which would help resolve the debate. Stirring up nationalist rhetoric or reprimanding or boycotting others is not helpful, nor can it help improve the human rights, and living and labor conditions of Uighurs.”

author
Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairman
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“I am shocked by the large number of judgments against lawyers, journalists and opposition activists in China in recent days. Once again, it is evident that vague legal terms are being used to restrict civil liberties.”

author
Germany’s Commissioner for Human Rights Policy and Humanitarian Assistance
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“The slew of detentions of those who speak out will only further impede the flow of information about the situation in China. Governments around the world should press Beijing to release wrongfully detained journalists and activists immediately.”

author
Human Rights Watch researcher
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