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US lawmaker calls Chinese sanctions 'badge of honor'


FILE - U.S. Representative Jim McGovern, part of a U.S. delegation, is presented with a traditional Tibetan Buddhist painting at a public event in Dharamshala, India, on June 19, 2024. McGovern on Aug. 2 said he would wear Chinese sanctions against him "as a badge of honor."
FILE - U.S. Representative Jim McGovern, part of a U.S. delegation, is presented with a traditional Tibetan Buddhist painting at a public event in Dharamshala, India, on June 19, 2024. McGovern on Aug. 2 said he would wear Chinese sanctions against him "as a badge of honor."

Representative Jim McGovern, the most recent U.S. lawmaker to be put under Chinese sanctions, says he will wear the sanctions "as a badge of honor," calling on the Chinese government to end its oppressive actions in Tibet, Xinjiang and Hong Kong in a statement emailed to VOA from the representative's media office Friday.

"These absurd sanctions against me only serve to highlight how PRC leaders are afraid of free and open debate. They seek to punish and silence those who disagree with them. But the world is watching what they do, and people who care about human rights will not be silent," he said in the statement.

China placed McGovern under sanctions Wednesday for frequently "interfering in China's internal affairs." In his politics, McGovern has taken on the Tibetan cause, sponsoring a bill advocating for a peaceful resolution of the China-Tibet dispute that President Joe Biden signed into law on July 12.

China views Tibet as an "inseparable part of China since ancient times," despite supporters of the Tibetan Government in Exile and the Dalai Lama saying that Tibet has historically been independent. Chinese state-sponsored media Xinhua said McGovern's Tibet-China Dispute Act "grossly interferes in China's internal affairs," violates international law and distorts historical facts to suppress China and encourage Tibetan separatist movements.

Framed as a response to McGovern's efforts to undermine Chinese territorial sovereignty, the sanctions freeze the representative's Chinese assets, prohibit organizations or individuals in China from engaging with him, and ban him and his family from entering Chinese territory, according to a publication from Xinhua.

McGovern, who represents the state of Massachusetts in the House of Representatives, has no assets or business dealings in China.

McGovern's Tibet-China Dispute Act, gives the State Department increased authority to counter Chinese disinformation about Tibet and promotes the resumption of talks between Chinese leaders and the Dalai Lama. No such talks have occurred since 2010.

China stands accused of large-scale human rights abuses in Tibet, which the congressman hoped to alleviate with this legislation.

In a statement released on June 12 when the bill passed the House, McGovern said, "The People's Republic of China has systematically denied Tibetans the right to self-determination and continues to deliberately erase Tibetan religion, culture and language.

"The ongoing oppression of the Tibetan people is a grave tragedy, and our bill provides further tools that empower both America and the international community to stand up for justice and peace," he said.

Among the signees of the statement were House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCaul, Senator Todd Young, McGovern and Senator Jeff Merkley.

China has sanctioned other U.S. representatives for their involvement in an issue that threatens Chinese territorial homogeneity. Over the last year, China has sanctioned Representative McCaul and former Representative Mike Gallagher over their support for Taiwan.

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