China opens illegal police stations across globe: Report

China opens illegal police stations across globe: Report

In its quest to become a global superpower, China’s government has established numerous illegal police stations around the world, including in developed countries such as Canada and Ireland, raising concerns among human rights activists.

According to Investigative Journalism Reportika, citing local media, such informal police service stations affiliated with the Public Security Bureau (PSB) have been set up across Canada to antagonize China’s adversaries.

Fuzhou has set up unofficial police service stations across Canada

Local media sources claim that Fuzhou has set up unofficial police service stations across Canada that are connected to the Public Security Bureau (PSB). Only the Greater Toronto Area is home to at least three of these stations. Investigative Journalism Reportika also claims that the Chinese government uses these illegal police stations to sway elections in other nations.

Investigative Journalism Reportika also claims that the Chinese government uses these illegal police stations to sway elections in other nations.

According to local media reports, Fuzhou has set up informal police service stations across Canada that are affiliated with the Public Security Bureau (PSB). At least three of these stations can only be found in the Greater Toronto Area.

According to Investigative Journalism Reportika, the Chinese government is also influencing elections in certain countries through these illegal police stations.

According to the Fuzhou police, 30 such stations have already been established in 21 countries.

Countries such as Ukraine, France, Spain, Germany, and the United Kingdom have such arrangements for Chinese police stations, and the leaders of the majority of these countries publicly question China’s rise and its deteriorating human rights records, while also being a part of the problem.

China has claimed that these establishments are “vocational skills training centres”

Human rights activists have accused China’s ruling Communist Party of committing widespread abuses in the name of security, including confining people in internment camps, forcibly separating families, and performing forced sterilization.

China, for its part, has stated that these facilities are “vocational skills training centers,” which are required to “counter” extremism and improve livelihoods. Chinese officials announced in late 2019 that the majority of “trainees” had “graduated” from the centers.

Michelle Bachelet, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, recently visited China and Xinjiang.

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