BEIJING: A rights group is urging New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern to raise concerns about reported Chinese government abuses of Muslims during her visit to Beijing.
Ardern's visit on Monday and Tuesday comes two weeks after a gunman killed 50 worshippers at two mosques in New Zealand. Human Rights Watch said Friday that Ardern "spoke forcefully in defense of Muslims' rights" after the attacks and should do so again in Beijing.
Hundreds of thousands of Chinese Muslims have been detained without charge in camps, where relatives and ex-inmates say they have been subjected to physical abuse and forced to renounce Islam.
Human Rights Watch said Ardern should publicly call on Chinese leaders to close the camps, end the abuses, and permit independent observers' access to the region.
HRW urges New Zealand's Ardern to discuss Muslims in China
Updated 29 March 2019
HRW urges New Zealand's Ardern to discuss Muslims in China
- Human Rights Watch said Friday that Ardern "spoke forcefully in defense of Muslims' rights" after the attacks and should do so again in Beijing
- It said Ardern should publicly call on Chinese leaders to close the camps, end the abuses