
A visit by European Union ambassadors to the Xinjiang region of China has stalled over their request for access to jailed Uighur academic Ilham Tohti, a diplomatic source confirmed Wednesday.
Since 2019, China says it has invited foreign diplomats and UN human rights chief Michelle Bachelet to visit Xinjiang, where rights groups allege more than one million Uighurs and other Muslim minorities are detained in internment camps.
But there has been little sign of progress.
A European diplomat told AFP it was because the mission wants to visit Tohti, an Uighur economist jailed for life on separatism charges in 2014.
He received the Sakharov Prize -- the EU's top human rights award -- in 2019.
"Negotiations are in a stalemate because of Tohti and other conditions," the diplomat said. "I don't think they are going soon."
China's ambassador to the European Union, Zhang Ming, on Tuesday said "almost everything had been arranged" for EU member states' ambassadors to visit Xinjiang.
But it had snagged on "unacceptable requests," he added.
"They insist on a meeting with one criminal convicted by Chinese law," he said. "This is unacceptable, I'm so sorry."
China strongly denies allegations of abuse involving Uighurs in Xinjiang and says all inmates have "graduated" from "vocational training centers.”
A delegation of three EU officials who took part in a carefully organized Xinjiang visit in January 2019 previously said they believed the people they met in a "training center" were reciting a dictated speech.
Zhang added that Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi extended an invitation to Bachelet on March 7, after she called for an "independent and comprehensive assessment of the human rights situation" in Xinjiang late February.
He insisted that Xinjiang is "open to foreign diplomats, journalists and tourists."
All foreign journalists face extensive harassment and surveillance from Chinese authorities when attempting to report from Xinjiang over the past year, according to the Foreign Correspondents' Club of China.
Meanwhile, UK lawmakers said on Wednesday that Britain should look to crack down on forced labor of Uighurs with a blacklist of companies that cannot show clean supply chains and tough penalties for those which break anti-slavery law.
Some firms operate in "willful blindness" over labor abuse risks in their supply chains, while the government is failing to properly enforce human rights standards, said the Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) scrutiny committee.
"Amid compelling evidence of abuses, there has been a sorry absence of significant new government measures to prohibit UK businesses from profiting from the forced labur of Uighurs in Xinjiang and other parts of China," said committee member Nusrat Ghani in a statement.