Watch: Pakistan PM Refuses To Criticise China’s Uyghur Abuse After Decrying Islamophobia Elsewhere
Pakistan PM Imran Khan has been completely silent on China's imprisonment of
over a million Uyghur Muslim minorities
Imran Khan, Pakistan's prime minister, continues to respond with a dead bat to
practically every criticism of one of his country's closest partners, China.
In an interview with Axios's Jonathan Swan last week, the
cricketer-turned-politician deftly avoided criticising China's persecution of
Uyghur Muslims in the Xinjiang region.
When asked about human rights violations in Xinjiang, Khan responded that
"this is not the situation".
.@jonathanvswan presses Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan on why he’s outspoken against Islamophobia in the West but silent about the genocide of Muslim Uyghurs in western China.
— Axios (@axios) June 20, 2021
Khan: I concentrate on what is happening on my border.
Swan: This is on your border. #AxiosOnHBO pic.twitter.com/QdLfY1qXGL
Khan went on to say that he doesn't comment on what's going on in other
countries because he's more concerned with what's going on in his own nation
and along his border, before adding that the situation in Kashmir is "far more
relevant" than what's going on with the Uyghurs.
Imran Khan has long aspired to be one of the Muslim world's most recognised
leaders. He has been leading a public fight in the West, particularly in
Europe, against Islamophobia. Khan gave a stunning statement at the United
Nations against Islamophobia and published an open letter inviting other
Muslim leaders to join him in his battle.
Despite his efforts on behalf of the Muslim world, he has been completely
silent on China's imprisonment of over a million Uyghur Muslim minorities.
This confinement is part of China's policy of forced assimilation, forced
labour, and sterilisation, which the United States and numerous Western
countries have labelled genocide.
In an interview with a TV channel in 2019, calling China as Pakistan's "best
friend", Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan had said he doesn't know much
about the situation of persecuted Uyghurs Muslims in China.
China has often been accused of widespread human rights abuses in Xinjiang. Up
to 2 million Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities are believed to have been
placed in mass detention centres in the region, according to the US State
Department. These people have allegedly been subject to indoctrination and
abuse.
Beijing, however, claims that these centres are voluntary and provide
vocational training as part of a de-radicalisation programme in Xinjiang.
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