Foreigners revealed that the Chinese government is inviting some countries to visit the United Nations Ambassador to visit Tibet and seek to counterattack the outside world's increasingly strong allegations of Tibet's human rights before reviewing the human rights situation of Tibet.

According to Reuters on Friday (September 1), diplomats said that the representatives of many countries in Geneva have received China invitation to visit Beijing and Tibet Autonomous Region.

The invitation letter issued by Chen Xu, the representative of the Permanent Permanent Permanent Permanent Permanent Period of the United Nations, said: "I believe this visit will make you better understand China's human rights policies and practice." Chen Xu also alsoIt is mentioned in the letter that the visited diplomats will participate in the meeting and on -site inspections on education, culture, religion, employment, and children's rights.

It is reported that the interviews cannot be determined at present, but the two diplomats revealed that the scope of inviting letters was quite wide.The report also quoted the photos posted by Cuban and Chinese diplomats in social media X (formerly known as Twitter) that the delegation included the ambassadors from Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua, Beros and Pakistan.

International labor organizations also confirmed to be invited to Tibet to visit in an email and discuss the situation of China's implementation of labor conventions.

The UN Human Rights Council is expected to issue a report on human rights issues in Tibet early next year, and UN human rights experts have expressed concerns about Tibet's human rights situation many times this year.In August this year, the United Nations asked Beijing to provide nine Tibetan democratic movements for being detained.

It is reported that Beijing's invitation of close countries to the United Nations to visit Tibet to visit Tibet in order to refute and counterattack the outside world's increasingly strong allegations to the human rights situation of Tibet before the United Nations.

U.S. Secretary of State Broskel said on August 22 that the Chinese government sent 1 million Tibetan children into a boarding school to carry out "compulsory assimilation" and announced that some of the Chinese officials involved in it.