Under President Xi Jinping, the Chinese government has sharply escalated systemic repression at home and abroad. Authorities arbitrarily detain human rights defenders, tightly control civil society, media, and the internet, and deploy invasive mass surveillance technology. The government imposes particularly heavy-handed control in Xinjiang and Tibet. In Xinjiang, nearly a decade after mass arbitrary detention and cultural persecution of a million Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims—amounting to crimes against humanity—there remains no accountability. In Tibet, authorities continue to impose strict controls on movement, religion, language, and access to information. Hong Kong’s once-robust freedoms have been dismantled under a sweeping national security regime.

The Chinese government also conducts transnational repression, harassing and silencing critics, diaspora communities, and activists abroad. Chinese diplomats act to mute criticism of the government’s human rights record and to weaken UN human rights bodies.

China and Tibet country page map

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