We use cookies to tailor your experience and present relevant ads. By clicking “Accept”, you agree that cookies can be placed per our Privacy Policy
ACCEPT
avatar image
Advertisement

China’s United Nations human rights review puts global divide on display

  • Western countries condemn Beijing for ‘serious violations’ in Tibet and Xinjiang and seek repeal of the national security law in Hong Kong
  • But Global South states praise China’s fight to alleviate poverty and its outreach to developing nations

Reading Time:4 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
20
The United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva on Tuesday during the review of China’s rights record. Photo: AFP

The battle lines were drawn in Geneva on Tuesday, as China faced a twice-a-decade United Nations public grilling over its human rights record.

On one side was a group of mostly Western countries that roundly lambasted Beijing’s “serious human rights violations” in Xinjiang and Tibet, and urged it to repeal the national security law it had imposed on Hong Kong.

On the other were most Global South nations, many of which praised China’s poverty alleviation policies, and Beijing’s long-standing partners, including Russia, Belarus and Vietnam, which encouraged the Chinese government to stick to its guns.

Each UN member state undergoes a peer review of its rights record roughly every 5 years, conducted under the auspices of the UN’s Human Rights Council.

This universal periodic review (UPR) was China’s first since 2018, with the country’s rights record becoming a major Western news story in the intervening period, alongside a soaring superpower rivalry with the United States.

Chen Xu, China’s ambassador to the UN in Geneva, during the Human Rights Council’s Universal Periodic Review session On Tuesday. Photo: Keystone via AP
Chen Xu, China’s ambassador to the UN in Geneva, during the Human Rights Council’s Universal Periodic Review session On Tuesday. Photo: Keystone via AP

The review embodied a schism over global geopolitics that has deepened at the UN in recent years, amid fierce and divisive conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East, and suggests that China’s outreach efforts to the developing world are bearing fruit.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2-3x faster
1.1x
220 WPM
Slow
Normal
Fast
1.1x