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Untitled Document
24/03/2004 | COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS 60TH SESSION. ITEM
7: THE RIGHT TO DEVELOPMENT
delivered by Enver Can
Thank you Mr. Chairman,
My name is Enver Can and I speak on behalf of the Transnational
Radical Party being also a member of its General Council.
As you all know, on the issue of development the Millennium
Declaration is crystal clear. Let me quote in particular from the paragraph
on “Equality”, where the documents states that “No individual
and no nation must be denied the opportunity to benefit from development. The
equal rights and opportunities of women and men must be assured.”
Mr.Chairman, neither the general principles, nor the goals
of the Declaration can be considered a possible hope for the Uighurs as they
live in a context, under the Chinese rule.
The Uighur people are deprived of the right to development.
Strict restrictions are imposed on their religious life; coercive birth-control
policy have been implemented on women; massive Han Chinese immigration into
East Turkestan is threatening the Uighur people to became a minority in their
own country and causing large scale of unemployment; systematic policy of assimilation
and sinization is being implemented especially in spheres of culture, education,
language and history. In such circumstances we cannot speak of a favorable atmosphere
for the Uighur people to develop freely with their culture and traditions.
Despite having signed the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights at the end of the 1990s, China has not amended itself including
the provisions contained in the international document in its policies, plans
and projects. Major projects have been devised and financed but used, rather
to advance the economy of the recipient regions, to displace and impoverish
our communities.
Uighurs's right to development, just like their right to have a say in the way
in which their region is administered, is simply non existing.
Mr. Chairman, distinguished delegates,
On behalf of the Transnational Radical Party I urge the Commission to devote
particular attention to the conditions in which several regions of China - and
their peoples - are forced to live and not prosper. Commission members that
are thoroughly interested in the matter should reach out to the United Nations
Development Program urging the agency to dedicate a substantial part of the
publication concerning Human Development on the issue of the Uighurs. If the
Uighurs will not become of international concern, there is the high risk that
their living conditions may evolve into a tragic and uncontrollable situation
in all sorts of ways.
I thank you Mr. Chairman.
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