A recently released UN agency report has revealed that China has dramatically expanded its state-sponsored slavery programme, tormenting Tibetans and indigenous Turkish communities in East Turkestan, ousting rural people from the land, and We will summarize the evidence that we choose cotton and choose cotton at the factory to make solar panels.
The Revelation is part of the Global Report Published Monday by the International Labour Organization (ILO), a UN organization. The ILO has extensively cited research by the International Federation of Trade Unions (ITUC). The Chinese Communist Party has shown that from 2017 to 2020 it evolved slavery programmes from popular concentration camps in East Turkestan, robbing what it calls “liberation.” “Supple” rural workers take part in manufacturing and processing.
Slavery is a major component of the Chinese government's Uyghur, Kazakhs, Kyrgyzstan and other ethnic groups that form the majority of the population of East Turkestan. China is believed to have begun construction of a concentration camp in Uyghurs around 2017, and later branded the “Vocational Training and Educational Training” Centre (VETC). Survivors of the camp reported enduring communist indoctrination, daily torture and humiliation, systematic rape and slavery. Some evidence suggests that the government trafficked prisoner organs to harvest first-class medical conditions. At their peak, it was estimated that VETC would jail as many as 3 million people.
Outside the camp, China has launched a massive forced sterilization campaign, thwarting locals and bringing Han communists to local families, despite having to withstand a sharp decline in fertility rates. They forced the community to be destroyed.
Though small, Beijing imposed similar programs on Tibet, pushing tens of thousands into slavery, stealing children from home to indoctrinate children from culture in communist boarding schools, and enslaving them. It suggests that it was forced.
ILO Report What was released this week began with celebrating the Chinese government, claiming that China has made “progress” and “to effectively apply” international labour law. It cites China, which bans “reeducation through labor,” which was practiced by the Uyghur camp in 2013, as a law to prevent sex trafficking of women and children.
The report was then submitted to UN agencies in September, and continued to “attention to observations” by the ITUC.
“ITUC advocates widespread forced labor practices in both the New Jiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (Shin Jiang) and the Tibet Autonomous Region (Tibet),” the report states, with China enslaving East Turkestan people. Here are two ways to do this:
First, since 2020, Uighurs and other ethnic and religious minorities suspected of endangering social stability and national security (the “Centre for Occupational Skills Training and Education” or the VSTEC system); The arbitrary detention system for the arbitrary detention system has been replaced by institutionalized long-term detention since 2020. He continued to track regular prisons following formal legal proceedings, particularly prominent intellectuals, and “release” detainees in labor-intensive industries such as textiles and electronics.
Second, a system that transfers “surplus” rural workers from traditional low-income livelihoods. [sic] For industries such as the processing of raw materials for the production of solar panels, batteries and other vehicle parts. Seasonal agricultural work; and seafood processing.
The second system, the ILO report, essentially shows that the government steals land from traditional farmers and forces those individuals into industrial slavery. Beijing describes this as “liberation” of rural people from the traditional lifestyle “poverty.”
Also, in Tibet, the ILO is for the purposes of “military style vocational training methods” and for employment that provides Tibetan nomads and farmers with measurable cash income in industries such as road construction, mining, or mining, mining, etc. He said he received evidence of similar policies, such as “exchange traditional livelihoods.” Food processing, thereby diluting the “negative effects of religion.” ”
“Local governments “actively guide” small ethnic farmers, relocate agricultural plots to large state-led cooperatives, and “freeze surplus workers for relocation to manufacturing or services sectors.” “I did,” the report adds. Citing Chinese slavery experts, the ILO report stated that since the last updater, The Service Sector, it has significantly changed the assessment of slavery in China,” the report added. .
The report concluded by “requiring” the Communist Party to explain itself.
Voice of America (VOA) It's attracting attention The ILO allegation report stated that the original ITUC report estimated that as many as 630,000 people in Tibet were enslaved in such a way in 2024. Also, since the last update of Chinese slavery, Chinese slavery experts said the ILO report has revised the assessment significantly, has shifted from the use of VETC to the theft of rural land, and has been a traditional one. We have moved to acquiring farmers.
The VOA reached out to the Chinese Embassy in Washington.
“Some forces continue to spread the lie that there is “forced labor” in New Jiang [East Turkistan] and Xizang [Tibet]replied spokesman Liu Pengyu. “The aim is to smear the image of China, slander the Chinese government's policies governing Shinjiang and Xizang, interfere in China's internal affairs, deceive the international community, and disrupt the stable development of Shinjiang and Xizang. It's about doing it.”
The Communist Party regularly uses false Mandarin names for colonized territory. In addition to Tibet and East Turkestan, the Chinese government has made little success in renaming India and the majority of the South China Sea.
In addition to directly condemning the report, Chinese state media was affected on Thursday after claiming that “increasing pressure” on China to abandon its racist slavery policies had failed. It released a report claiming it cites an increase in exports from the region.
“Despite increasing pressure from Western countries on issues such as so-called “forced labour” and import restrictions and sanctions, the new jiang Uygur autonomous region in northwestern China is Achieve “The historic highs of foreign trade in 2024,” the Xinhua National News Agency alleged.
“Last year, import values for the region surged to 4351.1 billion yuan (approximately USD 66.8 billion), an increase of 21.8% year-on-year, highlighting its incredible resilience and vitality,” Xinhua reported. did. “To date, over 3,000 state-owned and private companies have been actively engaged in foreign trade in the region.”

