By Andrew Silver
SHANGHAI (Reuters) — Thermo Fisher Scientific (NYSE:TMO) has pledged to stop selling forensic technology and equipment in Tibet that could be used for identifying individuals, a spokesperson for the company said.
The U.S. firm had offered dedicated human identification (HID) technology in Tibet, a region with a population of about 4 million people in western China, which a spokesperson told Reuters was used for applications that included tracking criminals.
Sales were «consistent with routine forensic investigation in an area of this size», they said, but «based on a number of factors we made the decision in mid-2023 to cease sales of HID products in the region ».
China seized control over Tibet in 1950 in what it describes as a «peaceful liberation» that helped unshackle the remote Himalayan region from its «feudalist» past. Since then, China has often been accused of stifling religious and cultural freedoms in the predominantly Buddhist region, an accusation which Beijing rejects.
The spokesperson declined to explain the reasons for its decision, which follows a similar announcement in 2019 that it would stop selling genetic sequencing equipment in another region of China, Xinjiang.
A report released in August 2022 by a U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights found that China's detention of Uyghurs and other Muslims in Xinjiang may constitute crimes against humanity, which the country has vigorously denied. Rights groups and media have also documented how authorities in Xinjiang were building a DNA database for Uyghurs, which authorities have denied.
The latest known restriction on the Thermo Fisher's China sales, first reported by Axios, has been welcomed by some shareholders. They had suggested
Read more on investing.com