Up to a million Uighurs and members of other mostly Muslim minority groups are held in extra-judicial detention in camps in the Xinjiang region, according to a group of experts cited by the United Nations.
This was the first visit to Xinjiang by a multinational body such as the EU since Beijing acknowledged the existence of the camps, which it calls "vocational training centres". It followed another trip last month, also led by the Chinese government, by diplomats from Russia and 11 Asian countries, most with large Muslim populations.
UN human rights chief Michelle Bachelet has said her office is seeking access to Xinjiang to check reports about the camps, with Beijing insisting UN officials can come only if they agree to stay out of the country's internal affairs. Beijing says the centres help people drawn to extremism steer clear of terrorism, and allow them to be reintegrated into society. But the programme has faced fierce criticism, notably from Washington and human rights groups. The EU has repeatedly voiced concerns about the human rights situation in Xinjiang, highlighting the issue of the camps in particular and warning that freedom of religion is being curbed.
Former camp inmates have said they were detained for following Islamic customs such as wearing long beards or the veil. An EU official confirmed a team of three visited the Xinjiang cities of Urumqi and Kashgar from January 11 to 13, "with the agreement and facilitation of the central and provincial authorities". During the trip, the officials were given "extensive supervised access" to sites including mosques, an Islamic teaching institute and one of the controversial "training centres".
"Whilst the sites that were visited were carefully selected by the authorities to support China's official narrative, the visit provided useful insight which complements other sources of information (including reports by UN bodies, international media, academic researchers, and NGOs)," the EU official said. "Many of these sources provide compelling, and mutually consistent, evidence of major and systematic human rights violations in Xinjiang."
Critics say China is seeking to assimilate Xinjiang's minority population and suppress religious and cultural practises that conflict with Communist ideology and the dominant Han culture. The trip comes with EU-China ties delicately poised. Brussels is seeking to find some common ground with Beijing as they both endure trade tensions with Washington - while also pushing back against steel dumping by the communist giant and fretting about possible Chinese use of tech infrastructure for spying.