Pitch Engine
Times Advertising


.

UN report on Xinjiang abuses leaves no room for plausible deniability

  • Written by Justine Nolan, Professor of Law and Justice and Director of the Australian Human Rights Institute, UNSW Sydney
UN report on Xinjiang abuses leaves no room for plausible deniabilityMark Schiefelbein/AP

The Chinese regime’s treatment of Uyghurs and other predominantly Muslim groups in the province of Xinjiang may constitute crimes against humanity, says a long-awaited report from the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.

It describes as “credible” allegations of torture, including...

Read more: UN report on Xinjiang abuses leaves no room for plausible deniability

More Articles ...

  1. Mental wealth and jobs: without it, we're just pouring water into a leaking bucket
  2. The jobs summit needs to think big: here are 3 priorities for future-proofing Australia
  3. An idea for the jobs summit: axing the 'business investment' visa would save Australia $119 billion over three decades
  4. When you change jobs, you get more pay – but the increase is less than it used to be
  5. I'm considering an interest-only home loan. What do I need to know?
  6. Feeling that fiscal drag? Why you could be worse off even if your pay has gone up
  7. Summit cheat sheet: what is productivity, and how well does it measure what we do?
  8. Why unions and small business want industry bargaining from the jobs summit – and big business doesn't
  9. Have we seen the last of $2 petrol for a while?
  10. The summit needs to get us switching jobs. It'd make most of us better off
  11. Is education or immigration the answer to our skills shortage? We asked 50 economists
  12. How do I find out what my superannuation fund invests in? A finance expert explains
  13. If productivity was the magical fix some claim, we wouldn't need a jobs summit
  14. Many jobs summit ideas for lifting wages don't make sense – upskilling does
  15. Hostile hospitality? Survey finds decent work conditions still missing from too many menus
  16. If the PM wants wage rises, he should start with the 1.6 million people on state payrolls
  17. Unfair dismissal rulings show personal circumstances matter in vaccine refusals
  18. Cruise ships are coming back to NZ waters – should we really be welcoming them?
  19. What happens if I can't pay my mortgage and what are my options?
  20. Conflict in the South China Sea threatens 90% of Australia's fuel imports: study
  21. Inflationary psychology could make things worse, but for now it's in check
  22. 10 images show just how attractive Australian shopping strips can be without cars
  23. Australia's inflation rate is about to go monthly. Be careful what you wish for
  24. Costco will change the way New Zealanders shop: 4 expert tips for getting the most out of a bulk buy
  25. Why unemployment is set to stay below 5% for years to come
  26. Costs of Sydney's driverless train conversion outweigh the benefits
  27. 'It's important not to overreact': Australia's top economists on how to fix high inflation
  28. Personality testing in job applications: what can and can't employers ask you?
  29. Australia’s News Media Bargaining Code led the world. It's time to finish what we started
  30. Pacific aviation is struggling to take off after the pandemic – how can the ‘blue continent’ stay connected?
  31. What's causing Australia's egg shortage? A shift to free-range and short winter days
  32. A foot and mouth outbreak in NZ would affect more than agriculture – tourism needs a plan too
  33. Crown Sydney casino opens – another beacon for criminals looking to launder dirty money
  34. Business can no longer ignore extreme heat events – it’s becoming a danger to the bottom line
  35. How 'bad credit' lender Cigno has dodged ASIC's grasp
  36. Avoiding a gas shortage is one thing, but what's needed is action on prices
  37. Inflation isn't the 6.1% they say it is – for many of us, it is much lower
  38. Why does the RBA keep hiking interest rates? It's scared it can't contain inflation
  39. After floods will come droughts (again). Better indicators will help us respond
  40. Hey minister, leave that gas trigger alone – it may fire up a fight with foreign investors
  41. Few Australians have the right to work from home, even after COVID. Here's how that could change
  42. Inflation is being amplified by firms with market power
  43. Inflation hasn't been higher for 32 years. What now?
  44. Labor is winding back reforms meant to hold super funds accountable to their members
  45. How did Sri Lanka run out of money? 5 graphs that explain its economic crisis
  46. Election promises should be costed before polling day, otherwise it's too late
  47. Playing on good feelings: when 'eudaimonic' social media goes bad
  48. International expert to review Reserve Bank as deputy governor says households in 'fairly good position' on rate rises
  49. 'Wellbeing'. It's why Labor's first budget will have more rigour than any before it
  50. Inflation is 2022’s boogeyman. How can we address rising living costs, while helping bring it down?
hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink testjetbahistipobetslogan bahis sitesicasino not on gamstopiptv satın aliptv satın aliptv satın alcasibompadişahbetgalabet girişcasibommarsbahisjojobetbetmarinomarkajbetjojobetxslotmarkajbetcasinoroyalmeritkingkingroyalpulibet