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Chinese Government Sanctions on UK Citizens

13 April 2021

Lead MP

Nigel Adams

Debate Type

Ministerial Statement

Tags

TaxationForeign AffairsParliamentary Procedure
Other Contributors: 8

At a Glance

Nigel Adams raised concerns about chinese government sanctions on uk citizens in the House of Commons. A government minister responded. Other MPs also contributed.

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Government Statement

TaxationForeign AffairsParliamentary Procedure
Government Statement
The Government stands in solidarity with those sanctioned by China, stating the action as 'utterly unacceptable and unwarranted'. On 22 March, the UK, EU, Canada, and US imposed sanctions on four senior Chinese officials and one entity involved in human rights violations against Uyghur Muslims. In response to China's retaliation by sanctioning nine individuals and four organisations including UK parliamentarians, the Prime Minister held private meetings with those named, while Lord Ahmad met others for guidance and support, including a designated FCDO point of contact and specialist briefings from relevant departments. The Government emphasises that this will not deter Members from raising human rights concerns in China, praising their role in highlighting abuses. Additionally, measures to ensure British businesses are not complicit in violations were announced by the Foreign Secretary.

Shadow Comment

Tim Loughton
Shadow Comment
Mr Deputy Speaker praised the Government's robust support for sanctioned parliamentarians as a matter of 'freedom of speech'. He questioned further action against China to highlight their sanctions' unacceptability, asking if new agreements will proceed. The Minister agreed that academic freedom is attacked by the sanctions on Dr Jo Smith Finley and Sir Geoffrey Nice QC, offering them support. Loughton called for an audit of Chinese influence in education, military capability, business, and infrastructure projects against British interests, demanding no kowtowing to China's abuses.
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