Treatment of Uyghurs in Xinjiang Members of the Alliance have been leading calls for political action in response to the ongoing human rights abuses in the
Xinjiang-Uyghur Autonomous Region, which include the forced internment of over one million Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims in
"re-education camps" and the
persecution of Uyghurs in China. The campaign was launched after the
Associated Press documented a report by Professor
Adrian Zenz which focused on a Chinese Government birth prevention programme in Xinjiang. IPAC co-chairs signed a joint statement in response to the revelations calling for a United Nations led investigation into the alleged atrocities. The statement was followed up by interventions from members of the Alliance in the European Parliament, the Italian Senate, the British House of Commons and the United States Congress. As a result, the British Government, for the first time, alongside EU, Canada and US, imposed sanctions against 4 senior Chinese officials, as well as the Public Security Bureau of the
Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps.
Hong Kong National Security Law The passing of the
National Security Law in Hong Kong was met with severe condemnation and calls to action from members of the Alliance. A joint statement from the co-chairs of the Alliance called for an international “lifeboat” scheme for Hong Kong citizens at risk of political persecution, and for countries to “review and recalibrate” relations with China in order to reduce “strategic dependency”. In a coordinated bi-partisan response IPAC members Senator Marco Rubio, Senator Bob Menendez, Representative Mike Gallagher and Representative
Joaquin Castro introduced the Hong Kong Safe Harbor Act in both chambers of the US Congress. IPAC members also made public statements on the issue in Australia, the European Union, Italy, Japan, Lithuania and the United Kingdom.
No Extradition to Hong Kong The Alliance is coordinating efforts to call for no extradition to Hong Kong, where it claims the rule of law is severely compromised following the passing of the National Security Law. The campaign saw quick success as Australia and Canada suspended their extradition treaties with Hong Kong. New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States have announced a review of extradition arrangements in response to the campaign.
Push to boycott Beijing 2022 On 20 August 2020,
Iain Duncan Smith gave a radio interview in London and raised doubts about the UK being able to participate in the
2022 Winter Olympics, due to be hosted by Beijing. "China has broken all the rules on free markets, subsidising huge businesses like Huawei, driven other businesses in the free world out of business... they are threatening Australia with sanctions and bullying them because they asked for an independent review on COVID-19 in China. If you add to that the concentration camps and the terrible human rights abuses in Hong Kong, you ask yourself the question, how do you get the point across that no country can behave like this?"Four weeks later, 160 human rights groups wrote a letter to the chief of the
International Olympic Committee asking it to consider China's poor human rights record — and revise its decision to let Beijing host the 2022 Winter Games. On 22 September 2020, speaking as the co-chair of the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, Duncan Smith made a more assertive statement asking the IOC to think again about allowing China to hosting the games, addressing China with the words: "The free world does have a strong position to say the bullying, the threatening, the internal repression, the border disputes, the arrogant attitude to your neighbours, the breaking of the treaty with Hong Kong — these must have consequences."
Revealing forced labor in Tibet On 22 September 2020, the Alliance co-published a report by Professor
Adrian Zenz describing an apparent widespread system of forced labor in the
Tibetan Autonomous Region perpetrated by the Chinese government. The co-chairs released a joint statement in which they call upon their governments to take immediate action to condemn the atrocities and to prevent further human rights abuses.
Introducing Magnitsky laws to target CCP officials In March 2021, the
European Union joined Britain and Canada to introduce sanctions on Chinese government officials, as a response to the persecution of Uyghurs. The joint action was publicly endorsed by the UK's foreign secretary
Dominic Raab who said "we are sending the clearest message to the Chinese government that the international community will not turn a blind eye to such serious and systemic human rights violations." The new law was strongly supported by I-PAC and, in turn, it was announced, China retaliated by sanctioning European MPs who are members of the alliance.
Genocide amendment In September 2020, Sir
Iain Duncan Smith, who is "convinced that the Chinese government was 'performing the systematic eradication of the
Uighur people'", said that the IPAC had "proposed an amendment to (a UK)
trade bill which states that if it is deemed that a country is practicing genocide then the trade arrangements with that country should not stand". By March 2021, the initiative was causing a rebellion in the Conservative Party, where many MPs joined opposition members to support the amendment. == Membership ==