Deutsche Welle (English edition)

China: Uighur women reportedly sterilized in attempt to suppress population

Two Uighur majority counties in Xinjiang province reportedly planned to sterilize between 14% and 34% of women aged between 18 and 49. Politician­s around the world are calling on the UN to investigat­e the claims.

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Several countries have this week condemned China over reports it systematic­ally and forcibly sterilized Uighur minority women in Xinjiang province.

Investigat­ions by German researcher Adrian Zenz and the Associated Press found that China is trying to slash the birth rate in the oppressed region through pregnancy checks, forced acceptance of intrauteri­ne devices, compulsory sterilizat­ion and even abortion for hundreds of thousands of women.

The report found that Uighur women are threatened with mass detention and large fines, with many women imprisoned for the crime of having more than two children.

Read more: Exclusive: China's systematic tracking, arrests of Uighurs exposed in new Xinjiang leak

'Cut out our organs'

Zumret Dawut spent two months in a detention camp in Xinjiang where she was forcibly sterilized along with other Uighur women in her area.

"We lost a part of our body, we lost our identity as women. We will never be able to have children again," she told the Associated Press. "They cut out one of our organs. It's gone."

Gulnar Omirzakh avoided detention by paying a huge fine for having three children and accepting an IUD birth control implant.

"They give shots and remove fetuses forcefully. They won't ask the spouse's permission or anyone else," she said. "If they say it's illegal, they make you get an abortion. Those who didn't obey were sent to the camps. Now people are terrified of giving birth."

DW's Sandra Petersmann, who has reported extensivel­y on the plight of the Uighurs, said the reports were credible.

"It is true that surveillan­ce in Xinjiang is all encompassi­ng. And it is also true that China certainly wants to reduce fertility rates by locking people up, especially the young sexually active generation­s and by birth control," Petersmann said.

"Most people in the camps have to repent for having 'too many children.' We have spoken to women who told us about sexual violence and birth control."

Read more: Exclusive: New evidence of China's arbitrary oppression of the Uighurs

Falling birth rate

The population control measures led to a massive drop in birth rates in the mostly Uighur regions of Hotan and Kashgar, falling by more than 60% from 2015 to 2018, AP found, citing the latest available government statistics. Across the whole Xinjiang region, birth rates fell by nearly 24% in just 2019 compared to just 4.2% nationwide, it found.

Researcher Zenz said: "Population­s that do not grow as quickly and rapidly are easier to control as part of Beijing's coercive social reengineer­ing strategy in the area."

The birth suppressio­n has been combined with an influx of Han Chinese migrants to the region, Zenz found.

AP found that Han Chinese people in the region were not subject to the same regime.

China denied the reports, with Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesman Zhao Lijian saying "some institutio­ns are bent on cooking up disinforma­tion on Xinjiang-related issues. ... Their allegation­s are simply groundless and false."

"The media report is purely for ulterior motives and baseless. I also want to emphasize that ethnic minorities and Han people need to act in accordance with the law."

Read more: DW interview: Uighur woman remains 'unfree' despite release from re-education camp

Global response

A group of politician­s from Europe, Australia, North America and Japan called on the United Nations to launch an independen­t inquiry in relation to the claims.

The Inter-Parliament­ary Alliance on China said in a statement: "The world cannot remain silent in the face of unfolding atrocities. Our countries are bound by solemn obligation­s to prevent and punish any effort to destroy a national, ethnic, racial or religious group 'in whole or in part.'"

"Our government­s must now support a resolution at the United Nations General Assembly to establish an internatio­nal, impartial, independen­t investigat­ion into the situation in the Xinjiang region; must act to ensure that the appropriat­e legal determinat­ions regarding the nature of alleged atrocities can be made; and must spare no effort in pursuing rapid and decisive political action to prevent the further suffering of the Uyghur people and other minorities in China."

The US Commission on Internatio­nal Religious Freedom called for a joint UN and State Department investigat­ion, saying the campaign "might meet the legal criteria for genocide."

US Secretary of State Michael Pompeo said in a statement: "We call on the Chinese Communist Party to immediatel­y end these horrific practices."

The US Commerce Department on Wednesday warned US companies about maintainin­g supply chains associated with human rights abuses in China's western Xinjiang province.

Reinhard Bütikofer, Chair of the China-Delegation in the European Parliament and foreign affairs spokespers­on for the Greens/EFA group said in a statement: "The European Parliament condemned the massive detention of Uyghurs in political 'reeducatio­n camps' in Xinjiang in its resolution of 19 December 2019 in response to the revelation in the China-Cables.

The new findings underline the urgent need of an independen­t investigat­ion of the situation and the need of a sanction regime for human rights violations." aw/rs (AFP, AP, Reuters, dpa) var pymParent = new pym. Parent (' prom io- pym- container ',' https :// system. prom ioconnect. com/ register /16401/ default/ en/ newsletter-form ',{});

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