Security state succeeded in silencing important contributor.
China’s modern development is framed as having been powered by urban industry and commerce. In this essay, Tamara Jacka proposes a different understanding of Chinese development as being underpinned and enabled by the exploitation of rural women. https://t.co/m0UHjM4GJ8pic.twitter.com/uquA5RbVnC
— Made in China Journal (@MIC_Journal) 7. März 2019
‚U.N. member states should quickly create a new mechanism to collect and preserve this crucial evidence to be used for future prosecutions.‘ Watch the video by @nytimes revealing footage that #Rohingya refugees have gathered, documenting the #genocidehttps://t.co/rCr11KinnS
— Human Rights & IHL (@GRC_HumanRights) 7. März 2019
Spoke to @ABC about @GuernicaCentre filing with @IntlCrimCourt on #Syria https://t.co/7iYAf5IpzM
— Toby Cadman (@tobycadman) 7. März 2019
Lawyers trying to use the Myanmar precedent as a basis for ICC jurisdiction in Syria
https://t.co/7sztv5W9Yz— David Bosco (@multilateralist) 7. März 2019
Perhaps other Tibetan studies researchers can add their survival stories of the Tibetan Tent Death Syndrome, and we could publish that as a survival guide booklet for foreign correspondents? Not sure why the Tibetan authorities never talked to those of us who returned alive?
— Adrian Zenz (@adrianzenz) 8. März 2019
And those foreign journalists who somehow escaped the Tibetan Tent Death Syndrome (TTDS) are known to have fallen headlong into public toilets, been impaled by icicles, or were mauled by yetis. https://t.co/GU5S2FKcKq
— Adrian Zenz (@adrianzenz) 8. März 2019
Wow! UC Berkeley really turned out to hear about China’s Mass Internment of Uyghurs. Hundreds showed up. pic.twitter.com/a8D559guyx
— Darren Byler (@dtbyler) 7. März 2019
After he exposed politicians‘ academic plagiarism and used facial recognition to identify NPC delegates, China’s security state has succeeded in silencing this important contributor. https://t.co/MlAtdC7MU4
— Adrian Zenz (@adrianzenz) 6. März 2019
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