Thank you Madame Chair,
Excellencies,
Distinguished guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is a great honour and privilege to be among the panelists of Session 1. Persons belonging to
national or ethnic, religious and linguistic minorities are often victims of multiple
discrimination.
This is specifically alarming, when gross human rights violations are committed by
permanent members of the UN Security Council. I am going to speak about discrimination
and other abuses the Uyghur and other minorities face in the Uyghur region of China.
Employment discrimination
The primary driver of Uyghur unemployment is ethnic discrimination. In both public and
private companies, Uyghurs face severe competition from Han locals/migrants. In all
industries, Han workers receive higher wages.
Only 17 percent of Uyghur university graduates secure a full-time job after graduation. Even
Uyghurs with perfect Mandarin face severe discrimination in the job market. Many job
advertisements discriminate more specifically against Uyghur women.
Former detainees of “re-education camps” and former convicts find that they cannot find
employment after serving prison sentences.
Rural Uyghurs face different kinds of labour violations that prevents them from seeking nonagricultural jobs.
Discrimination against Women
Uyghur women are subject to a program to “cleanse” them of their “extremist” thoughts
through “re-education” and forced labour facilities. China’s ban on Uyghur women wearing
religious symbols is a gender-based violation of Uyghur women’s rights.
Since 2015, the government of China has been reducing the birthrate of Uyghur women
through coercive family planning. There is a state-run campaign of mass female sterilization.
The Chinese delegation did not respond to the allegations made by the Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and simply denied the existence of
coercive birth policies without refuting the specific claims based on statistical data.
Religious Discrimination and Destruction of cultural heritage