Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
International

Disturbing Video Shows Hundreds Of Blindfolded Prisoners In Xinjiang, US Blacklists 28 Chinese Entities For Minorities' Repression

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Oct, 2019 07:18 PM

    The US has added 28 Chinese entities to an export blacklist, citing their role in Beijing's repression of Muslim minorities in Xinjiang, just days before high-level trade talks were slated to resume in Washington.


    Targets of the action by the Commerce Department on Monday include video-surveillance and facial-recognition giants Hangzhou Hikvision Digital Technology, Megvii Technology Inc. and SenseTime Group Ltd, Efe news reported.


    The Department's decision to put the firms to its "entity list" alongside telecommunications giant Huawei TechnologiesCo., which was added in May, means suppliers will be barred from providing technology that originates in the US to the Chinese firms without a license.

     


    The newly identified entities "have been implicated in human rights violations and abuses in the implementation of China's campaign of repression, mass arbitrary detention, and high-technology surveillance against Uighurs, Kazakhs, and other members of Muslim minority groups" in Xinjiang region, the Department said in a statement.


    A spokesman said the move was unrelated to the trade negotiations.


    Western scholars estimate more than one million Turkic Uighurs and other Muslim minorities have been arbitrarily detained in China's Xinjiang region in the past few years.


    The US will also add the Xinjiang Public Security Bureau and 19 subordinate entities to the entity list, along with Chinese firms Dahua Technology Co., IFLYTEK, Xiamen Meiya Pico Information Co., Yitu Technologies and Yixin Science & Technology Co., the Department statement added.


    The new policy will take effect later this week.


    Deputy-level US and Chinese officials began in Washington on Monday, followed by talks between Trump's top negotiators, US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, and China's top trade envoy, Liu He, beginning Thursday.


    Negotiations between the two countries for a sweeping trade deal hit an impasse in early May; while talks have continued, little progress has been made toward an accord, and most observers have narrowed their expectations of what negotiators may be able to achieve.


    President Donald Trump, speaking Monday at the White House at a signing ceremony for a trade deal with Japan, said there was "certainly a good possibility" of a big trade deal with China, adding that a partial deal is "unlikely".


    The one recent bright spot has been Chinese agricultural purchases. Chinese buyers bought more than 1.5 million metric tonnes of US soybeans in the last week of September alone, according to official data, some of the biggest purchases in more than a year.


    In August, China purchased nearly $1.5 billion of total agricultural exports, including $945 million of soybeans, according to a Commerce Department report, the best month since January 2018.


    The figures were some of the most encouraging since the US-China trade war got under way.


    On October 15, the US is set to raise tariffs to 30 per cent from 25 per cent on nearly $250 billion worth of goods. More tariffs kick in December 15, with 15 per cent levies on $156 billion in Chinese imports, including smartphones and other consumer goods.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Masood Azhar Listing In UN: China Denies Its Action Amounted To Sheltering Terrorists

    Defending its repeated attempts to block the listing of JeM chief Masood Azhar as a global terrorist by the UN, China on Friday refuted US allegation that its action amounted to protecting violent Islamic groups from sanctions.

    Masood Azhar Listing In UN: China Denies Its Action Amounted To Sheltering Terrorists

    IMF Pakistan Bailout Of $8 Billion To $12 Billion Likely By Mid-May: Minister

    IMF Pakistan Bailout Of $8 Billion To $12 Billion Likely By Mid-May: Minister
    The Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) government led by Prime Minister Imran Khan has been grappling with a severe balance of payments crisis. Islamabad has sought help from close allies like China, Saudi Arabia and the UAE to bail itself out from a severe balance-of-payments crisis.

    IMF Pakistan Bailout Of $8 Billion To $12 Billion Likely By Mid-May: Minister

    Air India Found To Be Using Boarding Passes With PM Modi's Photo Again

    Air India Friday was again found to be using boarding passes carrying photographs of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Gujarat Chief Minister Vijay Rupani, days after the national carrier decided to roll back such passes amid criticism over alleged poll code violation.  

    Air India Found To Be Using Boarding Passes With PM Modi's Photo Again

    Did Indian Missile Mistakenly Hit Its Own Mi17 Chopper In Conflict With Pakistan

    Was the Mi17 V5 chopper crash at Budgam near Srinagar on February 27 -- which killed all six Indian Air Force (IAF) personnel on board -- caused by an Indian air defence missile hit? That "could be one of the possibilities", a highly placed source said on Friday.  

    Did Indian Missile Mistakenly Hit Its Own Mi17 Chopper In Conflict With Pakistan

    Nirav Modi, Accused In PNB Scam, Denied Bail Again By London Court

    Judge Emma Arbuthnot has granted the Metropolitan Police custody of the 48-year-old businessman till the next hearing on April 26.

    Nirav Modi, Accused In PNB Scam, Denied Bail Again By London Court

    Bangladesh Woman With Two Wombs Gives Birth To Twins 26 Days After First Delivery

    A 20-year-old Bangladeshi woman has given birth to twins nearly a month after delivering a baby, media reported on Thursday. All three newborns are alive and healthy.

    Bangladesh Woman With Two Wombs Gives Birth To Twins 26 Days After First Delivery