HRW Urges Beijing Games Sponsors to Press China on Xinjiang

People wearing face masks following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak are seen near the lit-up Olympic rings at top of the Olympic Tower in China. Reuters file photo
People wearing face masks following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak are seen near the lit-up Olympic rings at top of the Olympic Tower in China. Reuters file photo
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HRW Urges Beijing Games Sponsors to Press China on Xinjiang

People wearing face masks following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak are seen near the lit-up Olympic rings at top of the Olympic Tower in China. Reuters file photo
People wearing face masks following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak are seen near the lit-up Olympic rings at top of the Olympic Tower in China. Reuters file photo

New York-based Human Rights Watch on Friday criticized corporations sponsoring the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics for ignoring what it says are China's crimes against humanity in its far western region of Xinjiang.

The group said in an online news conference that major sponsors of the Feb. 4-20 Winter Olympics should press China's government and the International Olympics Committee (IOC) on the host nation's human rights violations.

"The time for quiet diplomacy is over," said Minky Worden, director of Global Initiatives at Human Rights Watch.

Multinationals including US-based Coca-Cola, Intel, and AirBnB are among 13 "Olympic Partners", the highest level of sponsorship, collectively paying hundreds of millions of dollars.

Rights groups and US lawmakers have called on the IOC to postpone the Games and relocate them unless China ends what the United States deems genocide against ethnic Uyghurs and members of other Muslim minority groups.

UN rights experts have said that at least 1 million Muslims were detained in camps in Xinjiang since 2017.



Nearly 200 Killed in Terrorist Attack in Burkina Faso

Staff are seen at the hospital of Kaya which received more than 300 wounded. (State television)
Staff are seen at the hospital of Kaya which received more than 300 wounded. (State television)
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Nearly 200 Killed in Terrorist Attack in Burkina Faso

Staff are seen at the hospital of Kaya which received more than 300 wounded. (State television)
Staff are seen at the hospital of Kaya which received more than 300 wounded. (State television)

The Burkina Faso government said it will respond firmly to a terrorist attack that killed at least 200 people, mostly civilians, in the Barsalogho region, where terrorist groups affiliated with Al-Qaeda and ISIS are active.

The attack, which is the deadliest in the country this year, was carried out by dozens of heavily armed terrorists who entered the village in the early hours of Saturday morning.

For more than seven hours, they clashed with a unit of the army supported by local militia.

At least 200 people were killed, with another 300 wounded, according to an unofficial tally.

Local witnesses said every family lost at least one relative in the assault.

The assailants also targeted security forces, killing community leaders, numerous civilians, and several members of the security forces who responded to the attack.

The victims were buried in mass graves not far from the village.

Most of the injured were taken to a hospital in Kaya, the regional capital, about 45 kilometers from the site of the attack.

In light of the popular shock caused by the terrorist attack, the government sent on Sunday a ministerial delegation to the hospital, including Health Minister Robert Kargougou, Security Minister Mahamadou Sana, and government spokesman Jean-Emmanuel Ouedraogo.

Ouedraogo, denouncing the attack on national television, described it as a “cowardly and barbaric attack” carried out by “hordes of criminals” who targeted “women, children, the elderly, men, indiscriminately.”

Security Minister Sana assured the public that the Burkinabe armed forces will give “an answer so that the enemy knows that we will never again accept similar barbarism on our territory.”

No one has yet claimed responsibility for the attack. However, evidence show the attack was carried by the Group for Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM), Al-Qaeda’s branch for West Africa.

According to a local resident, the victims were mainly “young civilians, who came out in large numbers to help the soldiers dig trenches around the town, to protect themselves from possible attacks by armed terrorist groups.”

A security source said that “the response of the soldiers” and auxiliary troops “made it possible to neutralize several terrorists and avoid a greater tragedy.”

Extremists affiliated with Al-Qaeda and ISIS have waged a grinding insurgency since 2015 in Burkina Faso that has killed more than 20,000 people, including 4,000 in 2024, ACLED figures show.

The attacks have also displaced two million people.