With advocates of China’s Uyghur minority protesting loudly outside, a delegation of 40 Chinese envoys faced questions from the U.N. Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, which reviews the respect for rights in nearly all U.N. member states every few years.
During the six-hour hearing on Feb. 15, the U.N. committee asked the Chinese delegation about the forced labor in Xinjiang, the disparity in access to education, and the cultural and language rights of minorities.They were also questioned about reports of the destruction of mosques and monasteries in Xinjiang and the purpose of reeducation camps guarded with barbed wire and surveillance cameras.
Another Chinese delegate claimed that the barbed wire and surveillance cameras at the Xinjiang reeducation camps were put in place for safety reasons.
‘Crimes Against Humanity’
The human rights abuse charges followed the release of a U.N. report in August 2022 that detailed abuses committed by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) against Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities in the Xinjiang region.The U.N. report found that the scale and brutality of the detentions, framed by CCP authorities as compulsory reeducation camps or “vocational skills education centers,” likely qualified as a crime against humanity.
The report found that “10–20 percent of the adult ethnic population” in the region was subjected to some form of detention between 2017 and 2018. Many, it states, were tortured through beating, electrocution, starvation, and sleep deprivation.
Others were prohibited from speaking their native language, forced to only speak Mandarin and to recite “red songs” and other communist propaganda.
In October 2022, roughly 50 countries signed a joint statement at the U.N. General Assembly urging China to uphold its human rights obligations and release those who are being “arbitrarily deprived of their liberty” in Xinjiang.
The nations—which include the United States, Japan, the UK, Australia, Germany, and Israel—made up the largest group of countries to publicly condemn China’s ongoing human rights abuses.