It really is to first highlight the abuse and the scale and the severity of the human rights abuses taking place. Its main goal really is to stop the practice, to end the “strike hard” campaign, to convince concerned governments such as the Canadian government to take action.
That goal is expressed through a number of different recommendations that we've made. One is to publicly condemn the abuses that are occurring in Xinjiang and, if there's any concern about the validity of the detention centres, to call for a UN investigative team to investigate the situation.
I think we know quite well, however, that China in many ways is allowed to use its political and economic might to muzzle criticism of its actions around the world. If we are not vocal about the repression that's occurring in China, it will only be replicated in other communities. If the scale and the severity of the abuses taking place in Xinjiang were happening in any other country, we would see investigations occurring, a call for special mechanisms, an increasingly robust response by the international community. Unfortunately China, because it is China and because the abuses are happening there, is really in many ways given a free pass.