The report, by China scholar Adrian Zenz, has prompted international calls for the United Nations to investigate.
China denies the report’s accusations, calling them “unfounded.”
The state is in a position that faces a widespread complaint about detaining Uighurs in detention camps.
It is estimated that around one million Uighurs have been arrested in what the Chinese state defines as “re-education” camps.
China had denied the lifestyles of the camps, before protecting them as an indiscreet measure opposed to terrorism, following separatist violence in the Xinjiang region.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called on China to “put an end to these horrific practices.”
In a statement, he counseled “all U.S. nations not to easily end these dehumanizing abuses.”
China has faced the expansion of the global scrutiny apple over its Uighur therapy in recent years. A BBC investigation in 201 nine reported that young children in Xinjiang were systematic best friends separated from their families to separate from their Munarrow communities.
Zenz’s report was based on a set of official regional data, political and inter-inspection documents with women from ethnic minorities in Xinjiang.
He says Uighur women and other ethnic minorities are at risk of internment at the camp station by referring to pregnancies that exceed birth quotas.
It also indicates that girls who had fewer than the 2 youngest legal friends were best friends with intrauterine devices (IUDs), while others were forced to perform sterilization surgeries.
“Since a radical repression beyond 2016 transformed Xinjiang into a draconian police state, evidence of intrusive state meddling in reproductive autonomy is ubiquitous,” the report said.
According to Zenz data studies, the expansion of the herb-based population in Xinjiang has been mainly reduced in recent years, with expansion rates falling by 84% in the two largest Uighur prefectures between 201 and 2018 and fell in 2019.
“This kind of drop is unprecedented, there’s a ruthlessness to it,” Mr Zenz told the Associated Press. “This is part of a wider control campaign to subjugate the Uighurs.”
Former detainees at the detention station in Xinjiang reported receiving injections that examined their periods or caused bleeding consistent with the effects of contraceptive drugs.
“Overall, the Xinjiang government is likely to have a large capacity for mass sterilization of women with 3 or more children,” the report said.
On Monday, the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China (IAPC), a foreign organization of multi-party politicians who joined Conservative MP Iain Duncan Smith, Baroness Helena Kennedy QC and US Senator Marco Rubio, called on the UN to “identify an independent and independent stage investigation in the Xinjiang region.”
“There is now a close evidence framework, alleging mass imprisonment, indoctrination, extrajudicial detention, invasive surveillance, forced labour and destruction of Uighur cultural sites, adding cemeteries, as well as another bureaucracy of abuse,” he said.
“The rest of the world remains silent in the face of the atrotowns that are taking place. Our countries are bound by solemn obligations to save you and punish Apple’s efforts to destroy a national, ethnic, racial or devout organization” in whole or in part.”
According to an Associated Press report released Monday, in Xinjiang they have faced exorbitant fines and threats of internment for violating reproductive limits.
Gulnar Omirzakh, a Chinese-born Kazakh, ordered that an IUD be inserted after having her third child, AP reported. Two years later, in January 2018, four camouflage army officials knocked on his door and passed to omirzakh, the moneyless wife of a detained vegetable trader, 3 days to pay a fine of RMB175,000 (2000 euros) for having more than two children.
She was reportedly warned that she would enroll for her husband in a detention camp if she refused to pay.
“God bequeathed you teenagers. Preventing other Americans from having teenagers is a mistake,” Omirzakh told the AP. “They destroy us like other Americans.”
In response to Monday’s report, China’s foreign minister said the allegations were “unfounded” and showed “hidden motives.”
Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian accused the media of “false data on disorders applicable to Xinjiang.”
For decades, as a component of China’s one-child policy, urban minorities have been allowed to have two children, or three for rural families. A 2017 policy shift, led by President Xi Jinping, was spared the ethnic difference, allowing the Han Chinese to have a similar variety of teenagers as minorities, while recording the difference between urban and rural areas.
But according to the AP, the Han Chinese have been on a giant component free of abortions, sterilizations, IUD insertions and arrests opposed to minority populations, adding Uighurs.
Zenz’s report describes the alleged coercive birth crusade in Xinjiang as a component of a “demographic genocide crusade” opposed to Uighurs.
“These effects arise with the most powerful evidence to date that Beijing’s policy in Xinjiang meets the genocide criteria cited in the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide,” he wrote.