UN: Millions of water live on exile

A panel for human rights of the United Nations says it is estimated that a million ethnic waters in China are being held in “anti-extremism” and millions more are believed to be in reform camps, causing the western region to be safe in China to be “something that resembles a massive camp of [...]
A panel for human rights of the United Nations says it is estimated that a million ethnic waters in China are being held in “anti-extremism”, and millions of others are believed to be in reform camps, making the western region secure in China to be “something that resembles a massive exile camp<3>.
Gay McDougall, deputy chairman of the UN Committee for Elimination of Racor Discrimination, said that most of the banned waters and Muslim minorities, in the autonomous region of Xinjiang, have never been officially charged or brought to trial.
“We are deeply concerned that many reliable reports that we accept say that in the name of combating religious extremism and maintaining social stability in China, the autonomous region of Christians became something that resembles a massive exile camp”, she said.
The figures that McDougall presented appear to have been taken from the Chinese Network for the Protection of Human Rights.
China says the Xinjiang region faces threat from Islamist militants who plan attacks and provoke tensions between the water minority, who are Muslims and Han ethnicity, which are the majority.











