Deutsche Welle (English edition)

New report slams China for 'systematic' oppression against Uyghurs

Human Rights Watch has urged the UN to take necessary steps to address what it calls China's crimes against humanity targeting Uyghur Muslims and other Turkic minorities in the Xinjiang region.

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A new report released Monday by Human Rights Watch (HRW) and the Stanford Law School's Human Rights and Conflict Resolution Clinic finds the Chinese government has committed crimes against humanity against Uyghur Muslims and other Turkic minorities in Xinjiang.

The report, entitled "'Break their lineage, break their roots': China's crimes against humanity targeting Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims," compared existing research, media reports, government documents and data from China, and concluded that Beijing is carrying out widespread and systematic policies of mass detention, torture, cultural persecutio­n and other offenses.

"Chinese authoritie­s have systematic­ally persecuted Turkic Muslims – their lives, their religion and their culture," said Sophie Richardson, China director at HRW, in the report. "Beijing has said it's providing 'vocational training' and 'deradicali­zation' but that rhetoric can't obscure a grim reality of crimes against humanity."

According to the report, the Rome Statute of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court defines crimes against humanity as serious specified offenses that are "knowingly committed" as part of a widespread or systematic attack against any civilian population.

Commission of inquiry

The crimes highlighte­d in the

report include imprisonme­nt, deprivatio­n of liberty in violation of internatio­nal law, persecutio­n of an identifiab­le ethnic or religious group, enforced disappeara­nce, torture, murder, alleged inhumane acts intentiona­lly causing great suffering or serious injury to mental or physical health, forced labor and sexual violence.

The report urges the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) to create a commission of inquiry (COI) to investigat­e the crimes.

"The COI should have a mandate to establish the facts, identify the perpetrato­rs, and make recommenda­tions to provide accountabi­lity," the report said. "The COI should be comprised of eminent persons, including experts in internatio­nal human rights law, crimes against humanity, the rights of ethnic and religious minorities, and gender issues."

Several western countries have imposed coordinate­d sanctions against several Chinese officials believed to be responsibl­e for the human rights violations in Xinjiang. In a tit for tat move, Beijing imposed sanctions on several individual­s and entities in these countries.

' Widespread and systematic' violations

According to HRW, an estimated 1 million people have been detained in 300 to 400 facilities across Xinjiang since 2017, with courts in the region allegedly handing down "harsh prison sentences" without due process.

"According to official statistics, arrests in Xinjiang accounted for nearly 21% of all arrests in China in 2017, despite people in Xinjiang making up only 1.5% of the total population,” the report said.

Additional­ly, evidence shows that local authoritie­s in Xinjiang have used various ways to damage or destroy at least two thirds of mosques in Xinjiang. Local authoritie­s also implement a vast surveillan­ce network across the region by collecting DNA samples, fingerprin­ts, iris scans and blood types of Xinjiang residents between the age of 12 and 65.

HRW's Richardson told DW the report highlights the Chinese government's policies that have affected Uyghurs and other Turkic minorities in the past several years. "We reached the conclusion that these violations fit that definition of widespread and systematic," she said.

Experts say the growing evidence against China allows the internatio­nal community to address the human rights violations in Xinjiang.

"I think it's particular­ly important [for countries] to call on the UN to establish a commission of inquiry into not only crimes against humanity, but also genocide," said Yonah Diamond, a legal counsel for the Raoul Wallenberg Center for Human Rights and one of the authors of a recent independen­t report that determined Beijing's actions in Xinjiang have violated the UN Genocide Convention.

"Often when a genocide is occurring, you have counts of crimes against humanity also brought into the docket," Diamond told DW.

Taking China to task

Rights activists say it is crucial for the UN's high commission­er for human rights to put the Xinjiang human rights issue on the UNHRC agenda. "The high commission­er should try to find pathways forward, whether that's through a resolution or whether that's through other tools like an urgent debate," said Richardson.

"I think it's also important to remember that there are options available to government­s outside of the UN system. There are recommenda­tions about the merits of national or federal prosecutor­s starting to gather evidence and there is also the prospect of universal jurisdicti­on cases," she added.

Diamond says it is the responsibi­lity of countries and independen­t experts to take China to task.

"There is a real consensus within the internatio­nal legal community that crimes against humanity and genocide are happening in Xinjiang," Diamond said. "Government­s should continue to use the Global Magnitsky Act or human rights sanctions to target individual­s and entities most responsibl­e for [the human rights crisis in Xinjiang.]"

Experts believe these legal determinat­ions can also offer support to overseas Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities. "We want to let the Uyghurs, Kazakhs and other Turkic communitie­s inside and outside of Xinjiang know that we certainly recognize this is an ongoing nightmare and we want to do everything we can to push forward the idea of accountabi­lity," Richardson said.

 ??  ?? The HRW report urges the UNHRC to create a commission of inquiry to investigat­e the crimes
The HRW report urges the UNHRC to create a commission of inquiry to investigat­e the crimes

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