UN Committee Urges China to Dismantle Forced Labor Systems

Dolkun Isa, President of the World Uyghur Congress, poses at a U.S.-backed Uyghur photo exhibit of dozens of people who are missing or alleged to be held in CCP-run camps in Xinjiang, China in front of the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, on Sept. 16, 2021. (Denis Balibouse /Reuters) GENEVA—A U.N. committee said on Monday it was concerned about the Chinese communist regime’s treatment of its Muslim minority, including the use of forced labor against Uyghurs, in a sweeping report that adds pressure on Beijing to improve its human rights record. The findings by the group of U.N.-appointed independent experts follow a series of Geneva hearings last month where rights groups raised a range of topics including the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) COVID-19 policies, treatment of human rights defenders, and its Muslim minority. Last year, a report by the U.N. human rights chief said the CCP’s treatment of Uyghurs, a mainly Muslim ethnic minority that numbers around 10 million in Xinjiang, in the country’s far west, may constitute crimes against humanity. The CCP denies the allegations. The 18-person U.N. committee that monitors countries’ compliance under the international covenant on economic, social, and cultural rights voiced concern over “numerous indications of coercive measures, including forced labor” against ethnic minorities, including Uyghurs. It called on the CCP to immediately pass legislation prohibiting coercive measures; dismantle all systems of forced labor; and release all individuals subject to it. The CCP submitted an 11-page response to the report saying it would carefully study the recommendations and was open to implementing any “that are suited to China’s national realities.” However, it rejected the Xinjiang recommendations, among others. The committee also called for an end to “systematic” reprisals and prosecutions against human rights defenders and lawyers working in this area. It similarly voiced concern about growing mental health problems following the CCP’s prolonged lockdowns under its strict zero-COVID policy that ended late last year, and called for more funding for this area.

UN Committee Urges China to Dismantle Forced Labor Systems

Dolkun Isa, President of the World Uyghur Congress, poses at a U.S.-backed Uyghur photo exhibit of dozens of people who are missing or alleged to be held in CCP-run camps in Xinjiang, China in front of the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, on Sept. 16, 2021. (Denis Balibouse /Reuters)

GENEVA—A U.N. committee said on Monday it was concerned about the Chinese communist regime’s treatment of its Muslim minority, including the use of forced labor against Uyghurs, in a sweeping report that adds pressure on Beijing to improve its human rights record.

The findings by the group of U.N.-appointed independent experts follow a series of Geneva hearings last month where rights groups raised a range of topics including the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) COVID-19 policies, treatment of human rights defenders, and its Muslim minority.

Last year, a report by the U.N. human rights chief said the CCP’s treatment of Uyghurs, a mainly Muslim ethnic minority that numbers around 10 million in Xinjiang, in the country’s far west, may constitute crimes against humanity.

The CCP denies the allegations.

The 18-person U.N. committee that monitors countries’ compliance under the international covenant on economic, social, and cultural rights voiced concern over “numerous indications of coercive measures, including forced labor” against ethnic minorities, including Uyghurs.

It called on the CCP to immediately pass legislation prohibiting coercive measures; dismantle all systems of forced labor; and release all individuals subject to it.

The CCP submitted an 11-page response to the report saying it would carefully study the recommendations and was open to implementing any “that are suited to China’s national realities.” However, it rejected the Xinjiang recommendations, among others.

The committee also called for an end to “systematic” reprisals and prosecutions against human rights defenders and lawyers working in this area. It similarly voiced concern about growing mental health problems following the CCP’s prolonged lockdowns under its strict zero-COVID policy that ended late last year, and called for more funding for this area.