
‘Corrosive and dishonest': Investigation exposes China's oppression of its emigrants
This article is part of the China Targets project, an investigation by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) involving 42 media partners, including The Irish Times, into transnational oppression by Chinese authorities. See also:
An intimidated Chinese citizen in Ireland
and
Exerting control from a nondesctipt office on Capel Street
.
One hundred and five people in 23 countries outside
China
who said they were targeted by the Chinese authorities over recent years were interviewed as part of the
China Targets
project, an investigation by the
International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ)
involving 42 media partners, including The Irish Times, into transnational oppression.
Half of the people interviewed for the project, which is focused on China, said family members in that country had been intimidated or interrogated by the police or state security officials. Several said the intimidation began just hours after they had taken part in protests or public events in their host countries that the Beijing regime did not approve of.
Sixty of the interviewees – many of whom did not want to be identified – believed they had been followed or were surveilled in their adopted countries, and 19 said they had received suspicious emails or experienced hacking attempts.
READ MORE
The interviewees included Chinese and
Hong Kong
political dissidents as well as members of the Uyghur and Tibetan communities.
Liu Pengyu, spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in Washington DC, told the ICIJ in a statement that allegations against China of transnational repression were 'groundless' and 'fabricated by a handful of countries and organisations to slander China'.
'There is no such thing as 'reaching beyond borders' to target so-called dissidents and overseas Chinese,' he said.
The Palais des Nations, which houses the United Nations in Geneva. Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty
Geneva
The China Targets investigation was told by human rights activists and lawyers based in Geneva, where the headquarters of a number of UN bodies including the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights are based, that they believed they were being surveilled, harassed or intimidated by people they believed were Chinese diplomats or Government proxies, including delegates from non-governmental organisations (NGOs).
The UN grants thousands of NGOs consultative status, which carries certain privileges, on the expectation that they act without government interference.
But an ICIJ analysis of 106 such NGOs from mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan found that 59 were closely connected to the Chinese government or the Chinese Communist Party.
'It's corrosive. It's dishonest. It's subversive,' said Michèle Taylor, who served as US ambassador to the Human Rights Council from 2022 until earlier this year.
China-backed groups 'are masquerading as NGOs' as part of a broader effort by Beijing 'to obfuscate their own human rights violations and reshape the narrative around China's actions and culpabilities,' she told the ICIJ.
The Chinese government stands alone in the seriousness of the threat it poses to the global human rights system, said Kenneth Roth, who ran Human Rights Watch for nearly 30 years.
'To deter condemnation of its severe repression, foremost its mass detention of Uyghurs, Beijing has proposed to rewrite international human rights law,' he said.
Liu, the spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, DC, did not directly respond to questions about Beijing's deployment of NGOs at the UN in Geneva. Instead, Lui wrote in an email to the ICIJ that China had contributed 'constructively to global human rights governance'.
[
China says 'politically motivated' US and EU sanctions are damaging Uyghur minority, as trade drops dramatically
Opens in new window
]
'At the international level, China has put forward a series of proposals at the UN Human Rights Council on promoting human rights through co-operation and development, and on advancing economic, social, cultural rights as well as the rights of specific groups,' he wrote.
Interpol headquarters in Lyons, France. Photograph: Olivier Chassingnole/AFP/Getty
Interpol
The China Targets investigation found evidence that China is abusing Interpol, the international network for facilitating worldwide police co-operation and crime control.
The ICIJ and media partners found China was pursuing dissidents, powerful business figures and Uyghur rights activists using the Interpol system, in apparent violation of the organisation's rules.
Many targets of the Chinese security services only found out they were the subject of Interpol red notices – requests for someone's arrest pending extradition – when they were stopped at border controls at countries that act on the basis of notices issued at the request of the Chinese police.
Ireland does not have an extradition treaty with China. It suspended its extradition treaty arrangements with Hong Kong in 2020 following the Beijing regime's crackdown on political freedoms in the former British colony that year.
Taoiseach Micheál Martin with Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi at Government Buildings in Dublin in February. Photograph: Stephen Collins/Collins Photos
Protests outside China
During at least seven of the 31 overseas visits of Chinese president Xi Jinping between 2019 and 2024, local law enforcement infringed on protesters' rights so as to shield the Chinese leader from expressions of opposition, including by detaining or arresting activists, the China Targets investigation found.
The Xi visits where the ICIJ investigation found local law enforcement interfering with the right to protest were: France (twice), India, Nepal, Kazakhstan, Thailand, and Serbia.
[
Government urged to raise Uyghurs with visiting Chinese foreign minister
Opens in new window
]
In February, when the Chinese foreign minister, Wang Yi, visited Ireland and met Taoiseach Micheál Martin, An Garda Síochána did not interfere with the small group of Uyghur protesters who gathered outside the gates of Government Buildings on Upper Merrion Street, or the small number of protesters from the Falun Gong religious group who gathered on the pavement opposite the gates.
However, when the line of cars carrying the visiting Chinese minister and his entourage were leaving, a number of Garda vehicles pulled up alongside the Falun Gong protesters opposite the gates so the anti-Chinese Communist Party banners they were holding could not be seen by the Chinese leader as he was being driven away.
(International Consortium of Investigative Journalists/Colm Keena)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Independent
5 hours ago
- Irish Independent
At least 12 people shot dead by Israeli soldiers near Gaza aid hubs, health officials say
Israeli fire killed at least 12 people and wounded others as they headed towards two aid distribution points in the Gaza Strip run by an Israeli and US-backed group, Palestinian health officials and witnesses said on Sunday.


The Irish Sun
14 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Elon Musk has PTSD & made a MISTAKE by helping Trump, his dad claims as he reveals verdict on what caused explosive feud
ELON Musk has "White House PTSD" and thinks he made a mistake by helping Trump get reelected, his dad has claimed. 9 Errol Musk claims his son Elon has 'PTSD from the White House' Credit: East2West 9 Musk Snr also believes the Tesla boss regrets helping Trump get reelected Credit: Reuters 9 Errol is currently in Moscow to appear at a Kremlin-backed forum Credit: East2West 9 Elon reportedly donated $288 million to Trump's 2024 campaign Credit: AFP It comes just days after his billionaire son's high-profile alliance with the US President imploded in a fierce online feud. The world's richest man — who reportedly donated $288 million to Trump's 2024 campaign and briefly served as a White House aide — has now turned on the president over his sweeping tax and spending bill. Elon even claimed on X that Trump was tied to disgraced paedophile Jeffrey Epstein, Their bromance is now beyond repair. Read more on Elon and Trump On Sunday, Trump confirmed to NBC that he has no interest in making amends: 'I would assume so, yeah,' he said when asked if their relationship was over. 'I have no intention of speaking to him.' Now, the Tesla and SpaceX boss is said to be grappling with regret and fatigue from his turbulent stint in Washington. Musk Snr told Putin-controlled media: 'So at the moment, Elon is inclined to say that he's made a mistake.' 'Trump will prevail. He's the president, he was elected as the president. Most read in The US Sun 'Elon made a mistake, I think, but he's tired, he's stressed. He added: 'Five months of continuous stress, continuous, continuous stress, stress, stress. Trump crushes 'peace talk' hopes with Musk as he insists Elon has 'lost his mind' and 'vows to get rid of his Tesla' 'And then in the end, it's just him and Trump left… They still don't know what to do, so they fight with each other until they can come to normal conditions.' The South African businessman likened the split to a "marriage going wrong" and suggested his son was out of depth in the brutal political arena. He told Russian outlet Izvestia: 'It happens in marriages, it happens in partnerships, it happens a lot . 'And people have to understand that at the moment, Elon is having second thoughts... 'He's not a great politician, he is still learning, he's a great tech innovator and so forth. 'But his politics is, as I've said before, is a swimming pool with no bottom, it's a swimming pool with no sides. 'When you're in a swimming pool of politics, you've got to really know where to go. 'And he [Elon] doesn't realise that.' 9 Errol made the explosive claims on Putin-controlled media in Russia Credit: East2West 9 He said his son had a very stressful five months Credit: East2West Errol added that Elon had been trying to "get everything right" with a recent bill, but clashed with Trump over what he saw as excessive Democratic spending concessions. 'But unfortunately, he doesn't realise that in order to get their votes in the Senate and the Congress, Trump has to do that,' he said. 'They are the only two people left in the arena… and they took to each other, which is understandable.' Errol's comments were made to Tsargrad TV — owned by Konstantin Malofeev, a businessman with alleged links to Russian military intelligence. He praised Moscow, saying: 'Whoever designed this city is a true genius. These majestic buildings remind me of Ancient Rome.' He also dismissed Western portrayals of the Russian capital as 'nonsense.' 9 Trump and Musk's bromance fell through in a spectacular public feud online Credit: AFP 9 The feud erupted over Trump's 'big, beautiful bill,' which proposed stripping billions in government subsidies from Tesla Credit: AP Errol will speak at the Future Forum 2050, organised by Malofeev and Putin ideologist and 'philosopher' Alexander Dugin. Meanwhile, Russia appears eager to capitalize on Musk's estrangement from the US political elite. Putin crony Dmitry Medvedev cheekily offered to mediate peace talks between 'D and E' — Trump and Elon— 'for a reasonable fee and to accept Starlink shares as payment.' Another Kremlin loyalist, ex-space chief Dmitry Rogozin, publicly offered Musk asylum. 'You are respected in Russia. If you encounter insurmountable problems in the US, come to us and become one of us,' Rogozin wrote. Russia would offer him 'reliable comrades and complete freedom of technical creativity'. 9

The Journal
2 days ago
- The Journal
A new organisation has taken over Gaza food distribution with disastrous results - who's behind it?
WHILE THE ENTIRE population of the Gaza Strip in Palestine remains on the brink of famine, and Israel refuses to allow in thousands of truckloads of humanitarian aid, an organisation called the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation has taken over food distribution, with already disastrous results. The introduction of this new US and Israeli-backed entity into the besieged Palestinian territory has been part of Israel's plan to circumvent UN agencies and NGOs that already work in Gaza and have done so for decades. Those UN agencies and officials repeatedly condemned the establishment of the organisation, warning that it would allow Israel to weaponise the provision of food. NGOs said it would only serve to allow Israel to carry out a plan proposed by US President Donald Trump, and endorsed by Israeli government officials, which is to remove the Palestinian population from the area. At Nasser hospital in Khan Younis, people mourn those killed while gathering near a GHF centre on 3 June Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Trump's proposal to 'clean out' Gaza has been widely condemned as a plan for ethnic cleansing. The man who was initially heading up the organisation, US military veteran Jake Wood, resigned the day before it began operating in Gaza, citing similar concerns to those expressed by the UN. Israel has said the GHF is a means of preventing food and other supplies from falling into the hands of Hamas. In mid-May, Tom Fletcher of the UN's humanitarian affairs office called the Israeli-US plan to take over aid distribution 'a cynical sideshow'. 'Please stay away' Israeli forces have on a number of occasions now opened fire on crowds of hungry people who were making their way to distribution points operated by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF). The term Orwellian may be overused in modern discourse but, in this case, it seems to be the most appropriate description for an ostensibly humanitarian organisation whose distribution centre almost immediately became the site of massacres. One witness to the latest Israeli attack told AFP: 'It's a trap.' Since Wednesday, the GHF has suspended all aid distribution until further notice after Israel declared roads leading to its hubs 'combat zones'. 'Please stay away from distribution sites for your safety,' the GHF said in a Facebook post on Friday. All of the Israeli attacks have taken place at a centre in the Tal al-Sultan area outside Rafah City in the far south of the territory. Advertisement Palestinians carry boxes and bags containing food and humanitarian aid packages delivered by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo The first deadly incident happened on the morning of Sunday, 25 May, when 31 Palestinians were killed by Israeli gunfire , according to the Gaza Civil Defence agency. The following morning, Israeli forces shot dead three people, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). And last Tuesday, 27 people were killed by Israeli fire near the site, according to health officials. Israel has denied firing on civilians, saying it fired 'warning shots ' and calling early reports 'false' while the GHF initially did likewise. The Israeli military did admit firing at 'suspects' who they said had moved in their soldiers' direction on Tuesday. Who funds and runs the GHF? The short answer to the question of who funds the GHF is, we don't know. The organisation is registered in the United States and while it has a website , all it says is: 'Delivering critical aid and support to the people of Gaza. More information coming soon'. The New York Times reported that the idea for an organisation like the GHF first came from Israel and opposition politician Yair Lapid has suggested it is funded by the Israeli government. People carry away supplies from a GHF centre in Gaza Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo The GHF said last month that a Western European country had donated more than $100 million but did not name the country. As for who runs the GHF, a little more is known. A former USAID contractor, John Acree, took over as John Wood's interim replacement and an evangelical preacher and former Trump campaign advisor named Reverend Johnnie Moore was named the new chairman on Tuesday. Also on Tuesday, US consulting firm Boston Consulting Group, whose participation had not previously been disclosed, terminated its contract with the GHF. With reporting from AFP Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... Our Explainer articles bring context and explanations in plain language to help make sense of complex issues. We're asking readers like you to support us so we can continue to provide helpful context to everyone, regardless of their ability to pay. Learn More Support The Journal