US lawmakers urge sanctions on Xinjiang chief over Uighurs

AFP  |  Washington 

A broad group of US lawmakers on Wednesday called for sanctions against China's top in the region over alleged abuses -- including mass detentions -- against the Uighur minority.

The lawmakers asked to target Chen Quanguo, the secretary in the northwestern region, who earlier held a similar position in and has become reputed for his handling of minorities.

UN investigators say that some one million people have been rounded up in in a of cramped detention camps, with pressing Uighurs to renounce Islam through actions such as forcing them to eat pork, which is forbidden for Muslims.

"We are disappointed with the administration's failure so far to impose any sanctions related to the ongoing systemic and egregious human rights abuses in Xinjiang," said the letter addressed to and other top officials.

The lawmakers acknowledged the "strong rhetoric" from Vice and others but added, "words alone are not enough."

The letter was signed by Senators Marco Rubio, a Florida Republican close to Trump on foreign policy, and Bob Menendez, the top Democrat on the

Others who signed it include Senator Elizabeth Warren, a Democratic presidential candidate, Senator Mitt Romney, a former Republican presidential contender, and Representatives and Chris Smith, who head a congressional

The lawmakers asked the to invoke the Magnitsky Act on Chen and other top officials in Xinjiang.

The act -- named after a Russian who died in detention -- calls for the seizure of assets and a ban on US visits by any foreign found to be behind human rights abuses.

denies the accounts of mass detention, saying it is running educational training centers as part of a fight against Islamic extremism in Xinjiang.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, April 04 2019. 05:20 IST