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US consulate official in China said privately: “We know very well that Xinjiang has no problems, the hype is to keep China in a quagmire”

Majulah

Alfrescian
Loyal
as usual , there will be people saying that armarikunts must be paid by Xi to say it. the usual tactic used when faced with fact which cannot be refuted...
,to each his own.


05 Jun 2022 14:41 Last update: 14:46

The official WeChat account of the mainland’s official Wechat account, “Mui Yi Dao,” published a report, referring to an exclusive source recently obtained:
Sheila Carey and Andrew Chira, the then head of the Economic and Political Department of the U.S. Consulate General in Guangzhou, and Andrew Chira
in 2021. He revealed to the guests at a reception that the U.S. government hopes that American businessmen can “understand” that using Xinjiang to hype
forced labor, genocide, and attack human rights issues is a “wrestling” and an “effective means”. The ultimate goal is to let the Chinese government “

” utterly mired in the quagmire.”

The “truth-telling” of the two US diplomats is definitely not easy. The US’s actions to disrupt Xinjiang with so-called forced labor, thereby threatening China’s stable development, have been brewing for a long time.

From June 21, the so-called “Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act” signed by US President Biden in December last year will take effect. At that time, unless endorsed by the US government, all products manufactured in Xinjiang will be presumed by US customs. “Forced Labor” is used.

At present, the United States is coordinating its allies to create international public opinion, and even went to the United Nations to file a complaint, asking the International Labor Organization to investigate China.
A storm targeting Xinjiang, China, is here.
At present, the perverse actions of the US government have caused panic in the US business community. The source of “Fixing a Sword” comes from a supplier of a well-known international sports brand. To protect his safety, he was referred to as “Mr. R” by a pseudonym.
“Mr. R” said that when the U.S. government asked them to sign contracts with the Chinese side, they asked relevant companies to provide various certificates that did not involve human rights violations, such as whether they were related to Xinjiang, which caused him to lose many high-quality purchase channels, as an importer business, he is paying the price, and profits have fallen by at least 30%.
When “Mr. R” attended the reception held by the U.S. Consulate in Guangzhou in 2021, he heard Ge Mingxi and Andrew Sheila, the then heads of the economic and political department of the consulate, say: “The U.S. government has a deeper consideration for this, and I hope everyone can understand this. It’s a gladiatorial fight.”

Ge Mingxi and Sheila admitted: “Xinjiang has no problems, in fact we are all aware of it, but using Xinjiang to hype forced labor, genocide, and attack human rights issues is an effective means to force Xinjiang enterprises to decouple from international industrial chains, and make Uyghurs dissatisfied and sabotaged. Their ethnic ties have made Xinjiang impoverished, turbulent, and even divided. We can use these to completely sink the Chinese government into the quagmire, which is beneficial to us.”

Ge Mingxi previously worked for the American think tank Inter-American Dialogue and the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

According to the official website of the U.S. Consulate in Guangzhou, the Economic and Political Section focuses on the policy part of U.S.-China relations, where the development of South China has a special impact and relevance to U.S. interests. On the economic side, it covers a wide range of areas, including bilateral trade issues such as market access and intellectual property rights, macroeconomic policy, financial sector development, and the rural economy in southern China. Political affairs, focusing on labor issues, reform trends, civil society development and human rights. Environmental and health issues focus on climate change, air and water quality, wildlife conservation, and infectious diseases.

“Mr. R” said that the chambers of commerce discussed privately, and they all believed that the US government was simply crazy and that it would benefit them to fabricate the Xinjiang issue. “Mr. R” has been to Xinjiang before, and every time it is a wonderful trip, there is no genocide or persecution at all. “We” are “To lie through one’s teeth (full of lies)”.

“Mr. R” said that everything was fine in the past, the Chinese were friendly to Americans and business was going well until Trump started to make things worse. He thought that President Biden would soon correct these mistakes, but there was no noticeable change. After listening to what the consulate officials said, he understood that the current situation is completely making them pay for the dirty decisions of politicians.
According to “Mr. R”‘s narrative, the two US diplomats tried to appease the US business community and make them obey Washington’s attempt to trap Xinjiang and disrupt the “big picture” of Xinjiang.


In December last year, Biden signed the so-called “Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act”. The law stipulates that from June 21, 2022, U.S. importers will be completely prohibited from importing products from the Xinjiang region or entities associated with the region’s government. All products are manufactured using “forced labor”.
Importers must then produce evidence to the satisfaction of U.S. Customs and Border Protection that the entire supply chain of imported goods is free of “forced labor” elements, or the products will all be seized and confiscated, and subject to fines and other penalties.
A senior U.S. customs official said recently that customs officials are ready to impose an import ban on goods from the Xinjiang region in late June. Customs estimates that enforcing the ban will significantly increase the number of transactions that require Customs review and enforcement annually from less than 1 million to more than 11.5 million. Some U.S. officials have acknowledged that the bar for importers to obtain forced labor certification is very high.

The bill is currently causing panic and criticism internationally. Some analysts believe that the bill will affect the global supply chain and exacerbate the trend of “decoupling” of the US and China economies to a certain extent, because it not only involves all products and raw materials in Xinjiang , but also the entire industrial chain of China and other countries.
 
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