Thank you so much.
This is my third testimony in the House, especially in this committee. In 2006 and 2014, I came to the House with our leader.
First of all, on behalf of the Uighur Canadian community from coast to coast, I would like to thank each member for giving us this opportunity to shed light on the dire situation of Uighurs that continues with the intensification by the Chinese government.
Uighurs are Turkic-speaking people living in their ancestral homeland in East Turkestan, which was changed to the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region in October 1955, right after the annexation in 1949 with Tibet and Mongolia.
The human rights emergency of the Uighurs requires an urgent and resolute response from Canada and other western democracies because of the atrocities and the millions of Uighurs and other native ethnic groups who are affected. As we speak, according to some independent research organizations, such as the Chinese Human Rights Defenders, and other media reports, millions of Uighurs are being held in concentration camps extrajudicially by the Chinese government. Uighurs are approximately 1.5% of the total population in China, yet 25% of all prisoners in China are Uighurs. This number excludes those millions held in concentration camps.
The Uighur identity, including language, culture, history, unique architecture and religious beliefs, including Islamic dietary practices, praying and keeping religious books at home, as well as religious sanctuaries like mosques, churches and other elements, are being criminalized harshly by the Chinese government and punished indiscriminately.
Since the arrival of Chen Quanguo in late 2016, the textbook example of ethnic cleansing, collective punishment and the dehumanization of the Uighur people became routine and raised fear and alarm about what was going to be next. China's extended hand in the Rohingya genocide is well known. Now Uighurs as a nation are paying an extremely high price for a Chinese ambitious plan that was spearheaded by President Xi Jinping. China's belt and road initiative was presented as a 21st -century Marshall Plan. It was intended to colonize weaker and poorer nations by debt traps and eventually replace China as a global boss. East Turkistan is where four land corridors for belt and road initiative projects branch out to central Asia, part of Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
China is now sealing off the entire region, cutting off communication in and out, and building hundreds of concentration camps that hold millions of Uighurs without any charges or any terms of release. Continuous expansion of concentration camps in an open bid and the building of crematoria in every county in the region remind us of the past sad history of the 1940s. If anyone doubts that this is a kind of exaggeration, I recommend that they flip through the history books that recorded more than 80 million civilian deaths in the 1950s by the Communist Party. Especially, as reported by the Associated Press, the Chinese government is now separating Uighur children from their legal parents and locking them up in children's camps with barbed wire and heavy security under the name of kindergartens. Recent reports confirmed that a large number of Uighur inmates are being transferred to mainland China by stopping regular railroad service for civilians. That was reported by Radio Free Asia's Mandarin service yesterday.
Canadian citizens of Uighur origin have been victimized through harassment, threats and intimidation by the Chinese government and through hostage taking of their family members for a long time. A Canadian citizen of Uighur origin, Mr. Huseyin Jelil, has been serving a life sentence in China since 2006. Despite numerous updates, briefings to our government officials and high-level public statements by the U.S. government, including by Vice-President Pence, Secretary of State Pompeo, the U.S. Senate and Congress, and despite a number of urgent calls by the United Nations and the European Union member states to China to close the camps and release the Uighur victims, Canada has yet to issue a public statement to acknowledge the crisis and condemn the 21st-century concentration camps that are holding millions of Uighurs.
This double standard that Canada is uniquely holding compared to other western democracies not only undermines our credibility as a champion of promoting human rights globally, but it has already given the impression that we issue statements on the basis of country select. This double standard approach will keep our head down when history records the cries of Uighurs in the future.
Following are my recommendations to the attention of this committee.
I ask the Canadian Parliament to adapt a binding resolution for urging the Canadian government to follow the United Nations, European Union member states and U.S. response to the Uighur crises and to issue a strong public statement as soon as possible.
I urge the subcommittee to hold a second urgent hearing, or more, in the shortest possible time and listen to more first-hand witnesses to understand what is really going on in those concentration camps. I will assist in all my capacities to make such organization possible.
I urge the Canadian government to send a parliamentary fact-finding mission to East Turkestan to observe the 21st-century Orwellian state, and if possible talk with the Uighur victims.
I urge the Canadian government to follow in the footsteps of Germany and Sweden and issue a moratorium to immediately halt the deportation of Uighur refugees back to China. There is an 18-year-old Uighur girl who's already received a deportation order even though she doesn't have family back in China.
I urge the Canadian government to accept 3,000 to 4,000 Uighur refugees who are currently trapped in Turkey in fear of deportation back to China at any time. They are living without any access to humanitarian relief. UNHCR processes take more than four years.
Uighur families with newborn children abroad especially are experiencing hardship as they cannot get any citizenship for their kids from the Chinese mission. China is pushing them to go back to China by refusing to issue ID documents. Newborn Uighur kids are therefore stateless in many countries. Their birthright citizenship is not granted.
I urge Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada to review its policy for Uighur refugees and to speed up processing their refugee claims.
Finally, I ask the Government of Canada to use the Canadian Magnitsky act to punish those Chinese officials who are responsible for this crime against humanity occurring to Uighurs right now.
I thank you for your attention and I look forward to answering your questions.