The US State Department notified that visa restrictions on Chinese officials involving Xinjiang -related human rights in Tibet will continue to implement visa restrictions.

The US State Department spokesman Miller Miller Miller said in a statement issued on the official website on Friday (July 12) that the United States will continue to promote the accountability system of defending Chinese human rights."The State Council will adopt visa restrictions on officials of the People's Republic of China on the edge of social and racial communities today.

Miller said: "Xinjiang continues to have racial extinction crimes, Hong Kong's basic freedom of being eroded, the problem of human rights violations of Tibet, and cross -border targets around the world, showing that the People's Republic of China has not been committed to honoring respect and respectAnd the commitment to protect human rights. We urged the People's Republic of China to abide by the principles of the human rights declaration of the World, and accept the UN Human Rights Council this year that this year's generally reviewed the number of suggestions made on its human rights records, including the unconditional release of Chinese citizens who have been arbitrarily and unfair detention."

According to Agence France -Presse, the U.S. State Department did not list the list and number of Chinese officials who had been sanctioned in the statement, nor did it indicate whether more people were sanctioned.

During the administration of former President Trump, the United States publicly named several Chinese officials to refuse a visa, including Chen Nationwide, a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China and secretary of the Party Committee of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.