Konflikti Kiinan merellä

Eli tuota logiikkaa jatkamalla mielestäsi Kiina ei ole tehnyt kansanmurhaa koska tuomioistuin jolla ei ole valtaa on roskaa.
 
Chinese human rights lawyers and activists said they have been blocked from leaving their homes this week ahead of events to mark Friday's UN Human Rights Day.

China has seen a dramatic crackdown on civil liberties and freedoms since President Xi Jinping took power in 2012, with hundreds of human rights lawyers and activists detained or placed under monitoring in recent years.

Wang Quanzhang, a human rights lawyer detained for four-and-a-half years as part of a sweeping crackdown on human rights defenders, told AFP that police were blocking him and his wife from leaving their Beijing apartment unattended.

"They told us directly that there were two reasons, one was the US democracy summit, and they were also worried we would take part in World Human Rights Day," Wang, who was released last year, told AFP on Friday.
 
Eli tuota logiikkaa jatkamalla mielestäsi Kiina ei ole tehnyt kansanmurhaa koska tuomioistuin jolla ei ole valtaa on roskaa.
Mind blown!
Otetaanpa vähän rautalankaa. Mielestäni epävirallinen tuomioistuin on terminä äärimmäisen harhaanjohtava. Murhaa voisi kutsua sitten vaikkapa epävirallisen kuolemantuomion täytäntöönpanoksi.

En kyllä minkään loogisella ajatuksen kululla pääse tuohon esittämääsi lopputulokseen. Tuomioistuin termin väärinkäytön kritisoinnista on hankala päästä uiguurien kansanmurhan kieltämiseen.
 
Mind blown!
Otetaanpa vähän rautalankaa. Mielestäni epävirallinen tuomioistuin on terminä äärimmäisen harhaanjohtava. Murhaa voisi kutsua sitten vaikkapa epävirallisen kuolemantuomion täytäntöönpanoksi.

En kyllä minkään loogisella ajatuksen kululla pääse tuohon esittämääsi lopputulokseen. Tuomioistuin termin väärinkäytön kritisoinnista on hankala päästä uiguurien kansanmurhan kieltämiseen.
Niin, tuossa on se ongelma, että jos tuollaiset "epäviralliset tuomioistuimet" (vaikka tässä tapauksessa olisikin ehkä pätevä) hyväksytään, tulee meidän samalla logiikalla hyväksyä vaikka Neuvostoliiton rintamatuomiot. Nuo asiat pitää viedä kansainvälisesti tunnustettuihin kansainvälisiin tuomioistuimiin (no, Kiina ei sitten semmoisia tunnusta), jotta ne ovat kansainvälisesti juridisesti kestäviä päätöksiä. Moraalisesti toki @ctg on oikeassa, mutta juridiikka on oma juttunsa, valitettavasti. :-(
 
Hei trolli, huomaa että Kiina on pyyhkinyt perseensä Haagin päätöksillä ja sä iniset lakimiesten kokoontumisesta.
Haagi?
Moni iso maa on pyyhkinyt tuolla persettä? Sitä ei tunnusta USA,Venäjä,Kiina,Intia.



Usahan laittoi myös tuolle puljulle pakotteita.
Pääsyyttäjä joutui myös pakotelistalle.


International Criminal Court officials sanctioned by US​

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-54003527
 
Hong Kong's leader on Monday hailed the outcome of a "patriots only" legislature election that saw a record low voter turnout and government loyalists sweep every seat.
The financial hub selected new lawmakers on Sunday under fresh rules imposed by Beijing that dramatically cut directly elected seats and controlled who could stand for office after huge democracy protests convulsed the city two years ago.
Figures showed just 30 percent of the electorate cast ballots, the lowest rate both of the period since the city's 1997 handover to China and the British colonial era.
Hong Kong's chief executive Carrie Lam defended the new system and played down the poor turnout.
"Hong Kong is now back on the right track of One Country, Two Systems," she told reporters, naming the model China uses to give the city some autonomy from the authoritarian mainland.
"We cannot copy and paste the so-called democratic system or rules of the Western countries," she added, arguing the new rules meant "anti-China" elements were now excluded and political calm restored.
When asked why only 1.3 million of the 4.5 million registered voters cast ballots, Lam replied: "What is the reason, I can't analyse. You may need to turn to other opinion leaders."
Zhao Lijian, China's foreign ministry spokesman, blamed the low turnout on the pandemic and "anti-China elements bent on destroying Hong Kong and the interference of external forces".

Only 30 percent, or 1,350,680 of the 4,472,863 registered voters, cast their ballots for city lawmakers in Sunday's poll, Hong Kong's top election official, Barnabas Fung, told reporters.
The new rules which drastically reduce the number of directly elected seats and control who can run for office were dictated by Beijing in response to massive and often violent pro-democracy protests two years ago.
All candidates have been vetted for their patriotism and political loyalty to China and only 20 of the 90 legislature seats are being directly elected.
The largest chunk of seats -- 40 -- are being picked by a committee of 1,500 staunch Beijing loyalists.
 
Noniin pikkupojat, rauha maahan. Kaikki on yhtä mieltä siitä että Kiina on kansanmurhaa suorittava diktatuuri ja uhka demokratialle. Ei tartte alkaa tappelemaan siitä kuka on eniten samaa mieltä.
 
China blacklisted four members of a US federal commission on religious freedom on Tuesday in the latest tit-for-tat response to Washington's own sanctions targeting alleged perpetrators of "genocide" in Xinjiang.
The move came as Beijing also hit out at Washington for appointing a new special coordinator for Tibet and blasted global powers over their criticism of local elections in Hong Kong that vetted out the opposition.
China's treatment of Tibetans, Muslim minority Uyghurs in Xinjiang and an ongoing crackdown on dissent in Hong Kong have contributed to worsening diplomatic relations between Western powers and Beijing.
Xinjiang in particular has prompted Washington to slap sanctions on a growing list of Chinese politicians and companies as well as a diplomatic boycott of the upcoming Winter Olympics, sparking fury in Beijing and reciprocal measures.
On Tuesday China announced the latest targets -- four members of the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF).
Beijing's foreign ministry named chairwoman Nadine Maenza, vice chairman Nury Turkel, as well as commissioners Anurima Bhargava and James W. Carr as newly sanctioned.
"These countermeasures include the prohibition of the above-mentioned persons from entering China and the freezing of their assets in Mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau," spokesman Zhao Lijian told reporters.
"Chinese citizens and institutions are also prohibited from dealing with these people."
Set up in 1998, USCIRF is a federal commission that surveys religious freedom around the world and has been a vocal critic of China's treatment of Uighur Muslims, a rare bipartisan issue in polarised Washington.
The announcement came days after the US unleashed a volley of new actions over Xinjiang that included a ban on virtually all imports from the region -- a major global cotton producer -- over forced labour allegations.
It has also recently blacklisted Chinese companies like drone maker DJI and artificial intelligence startup SenseTime over their alleged work with authorities in Xinjiang.
 
Danish shipping giant, AP Moeller-Maersk, said Wednesday it has agreed to acquire LF Logistics, a subsidiary of Chinese supply chain manager Li & Fung, for $3.6 billion as it seeks to expand beyond its core ocean freight business.
"Maersk is now taking another significant step to provide our customers with integrated logistics... shifting the balance significantly towards global logistics and integrated end-to-end services and solutions," Maersk said in a statement.
The deal, which is to be finalised next year, "will allow us to offer truly global door-to-door supply chain solutions," the statement said.
In November, the Danish group had already acquired German air freight company Senator International.
Maersk, which sold its oil division in 2017 to TotalEnergies, is seeking to refocus its business on transport and logistics.
LF Logistics employs 10,000 people and has 223 warehouses in 14 countries in the Asia-Pacific region.
With operations in 130 countries, Maersk employs around 80,000 people worldwide.
As a result of the coronavirus pandemic, demand for shipping has surged since mid-2020, in particular from Asia to the United States and Europe.
Additionally, many companies are still in the process of replenishing their stocks which had become sharply depleted during the first months of the Covid crisis.
 
Xin joululahja

China said Thursday it would send police advisors and riot gear to the Solomon Islands, a day after foreign peacekeepers deployed during deadly protests last month began leaving the Pacific nation.
The crisis in the island chain of 800,000 people erupted in November when protesters tried to storm parliament and then went on a three-day rampage, torching much of the capital Honiara's Chinatown.
The protests were sparked by opposition to veteran Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare and partly fuelled by poverty, unemployment and inter-island rivalries.
But a subplot to the unrest was Sogavare's efforts to forge closer ties with Beijing after abruptly breaking off the island's long-time ties with Taiwan in 2019.
China baulks at any official exchanges between other countries and self-ruled Taiwan, which it sees as its own territory awaiting reunification.
Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian said Beijing would "urgently provide" support "at the request of the Solomon Islands government", adding that the materials and personnel would arrive "in the near future".
In a statement, the Solomons government said it had accepted Beijing's offer of six "liaison officers" to train its police force and equipment including shields, helmets, batons and other "non-lethal" gear.
The government said the support will help the islands' police confront future threats, adding that it "will always stand firm to ensure that our peace and tranquillity as a nation is maintained".
"China firmly supports the Solomon Islands government's efforts to maintain domestic stability", Zhao said at a Thursday press conference.
Beijing "firmly safeguards" the rights of Chinese citizens in the Solomon Islands and "strongly condemns all illegal acts of violence", he said.
Zhao added that the supplies will "play a constructive role in enhancing the capacities of the Solomon Islands police forces".
In recent years China has stepped up pressure to isolate Taiwan internationally, getting eight nations to switch diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing since 2016.
Last week, Solomons' police charged a leading member of the opposition over the riots, though allies called the move politically motivated.
One group of the over 200 international peacekeepers deployed to maintain calm in Honiara has now begun to return home, Australia said Wednesday.
 
China has replaced the Communist party official widely associated with a security crackdown targeting ethnic Uyghurs and other Muslims in the far-west region of Xinjiang.

The state-owned Xinhua news agency said in a brief announcement on Saturday that Ma Xingrui, the governor of the coastal economic powerhouse Guangdong province since 2017, had replaced Chen Quanguo as the Xinjiang party chief. Chen will move to another role.

The change came amid a wider reshuffle ahead of next year’s 20th party congress, scheduled for the autumn. It is not clear whether the move signals a rethink in China’s overall approach to Xinjiang. Beijing would be sensitive to any interpretation that it was bowing to international pressure.

Some Chinese observers have noted Chen may be promoted further during the party congress. Others say his replacement, Ma, may focus more on the region’s economic development.

Syyllistäminen, potkut ja ylentäminen samassa paketissa.
 
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