كاميل وايت، طالبة أويغورية من الصين تم احتجازها بعد نشر فيديو

اندلعت احتجاجات سلمية في نوفمبر 2022 في عدة مناطق في الصين، والتي تُعرف بـ “احتجاجات الورقة البيضاء” نتيجة حريق حصار مميت في 24 نوفمبر 2022 وسياسة القضاء على فيروس كورونا  في الصين بشكل عام. تسبب الحريق في وفاة عشرة أشخاص على الأقل.  قامت السلطات الصينية  في السنوات الأخيرة بانتهاكات واسعة ومنهجية لحقوق الإنسان واستهداف طلاب وعلماء أويغور وغيرهم من أعضاء المثقفين أويغور في آرتوش[1]. منذ عام 2017، تم احتجاز 386 حالة معروفة لأويغور أو اختفائهم أو سجنهم. يناقش  هذا المقال المزيد من التفاصيل حول قضية كاميل وايت والنداء العاجل لإطلاق سراحها

 اعتقال كاميل وايت

كاميل وايت هي طالبة جامعية مسلمة أويغورية تبلغ من العمر 19 عامًا وتعيش في هنان بالصين. تم احتجاز كاميل من قبل شرطة مدينة آرتوش المحلية في 12 ديسمبر 2022 بعد عودتها من آرتوش (شينجيانغ)، مسقط رأسها، لقضاء عطلة الشتاء. وفقًا لأخ كاميل، كوسير وايت المقيم في الولايات المتحدة، تم استهدافها بسبب فيديو نشرته عبر الإنترنت حول احتجاجات الورقة البيضاء. في 2 فبراير 2023، دعا كوسير وايت وطالب السلطات الصينية بإطلاق سراح شقيقته فورًا والسماح لها بالحديث إليه. وأكد أن شقيقته “بريئة ولم ترتكب أي جرائم”[1]. حتى الآن، تم احتجاز كاميل منذ ديسمبر 2022. كما لا يسمح لها بالاتصال بعائلتها أو اختيار محامي. وهناك احتمالية أن كاميل تعرضت للتعذيب والمعاملة السيئة  الأخرى

نداء عاجل لإطلاق سراح كاميل

لم يتضح بعد أسباب احتجاز كاميل، ويثير اعتقالها قضايا تتعلق بحرية التمييز وحرية الرأي والتعبير. لذلك، يجب إطلاق سراح كاميل فورًا ما لم يكن هناك دليل كاف وموثوق وقابل للاعتماد على أنها ارتكبت جريمة معروفة دوليًا. علاوة على ذلك، يجب الإفصاح عن مكان تواجد كاميل في انتظار إطلاق سراحها، ويجب السماح لها بالوصول المنتظم إلى عائلتها ومحامٍ من اختيارها. وأخيرًا، في انتظار إطلاق سراحها، يجب التأكد من توفير رعاية طبية كافية لكاميل وعدم تعرضها للتعذيب أو المعاملة السيئة الأخرى

تحرّك!

دعت منظمة العفو الدولية، وهي منظمة غير حكومية تدافع عن حقوق الإنسان الدولية، إلى التحرّك عبر كتابة نداء أو توقيع عريضة. يمكنك مساعدة كاميل والسعي لحماية سلامتها من خلال تسجيل نداء أو توقيع العريضة. يرجى الانتقال إلى China: Uyghur student detained for posting protest video: Kamile Wayit – Amnesty International للاطلاع على نموذج رسالة لكتابة نداء، أو الانتقال إلى هذا الرابط لتوقيع العريضة.

في النهاية

تناول هذا المقال استهداف الطلاب والعلماء وأعضاء النخبة الثقافية الأويغور في آرتوش، مع التركيز بشكل خاص على قضية كاميل وايت.تدعو بروكن تشاك مثل منظمة العفو الدولية إلى اتخاذ إجراءات و تلبية الحاجة الملحة لإطلاق سراح كاميل. بالإضافة إلى ذلك، تدعو بروكن تشاك حكومة الصين إلى إطلاق سراح جميع المحتجزين والمحكوم عليهم بسبب عرقهم أو دينهم أو ممارسة حقوقهم الأساسية للإنسان بشكل سلمي. كما تدعو المجتمع الدولي إلى إدانة بشكل عاجل اضطهاد حكومة الصين للفكريين الأويغور.

كتابة: Asha Ouni

 

Universal Periodic Review of China

  • Broken Chalk is a non-profit organisation with one main goal – To protect human rights in education. The organisation has a website and articles and is currently working on multiple projects, each aiming to fight human rights violations in the educational sphere. This report drafted by Broken Chalk contributes to the fourth cycle of the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) for China, focusing exclusively on China’s human rights issues in education.
  • During the 3rd Cycle of the Universal Periodic Review for China in November 2018, China received 346 recommendations and supported 284. Twelve per cent of these supported recommendations relate to the 4th Sustainable Development Goal, Quality Education. These recommendations in the 3rd UPR Cycle will be the basis on which Broken Chalk discusses the progress of human rights issues related to education in China. This report from Broken Chalk will also suggest some recommendations for these educational issues as part of the 4th cycle of the Universal Periodic Review for China.
by Melissa Sugiarta

Download the PDF

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Çin’de yaşayan Uygur öğrenci Kamile Wayit bir video yayınladıktan sonra gözaltına alındı

24 Kasım 2022’de, insanlar karantinadayken bir yangın meydana geldi, Çin’de sıfır COVID politikası uygulandığı için devlet tarafından yardım edilmedi ve yaklaşık 10 kişi hayatını kaybetti.”Beyaz Kağıt Protestoları” olarak adlandırılan barışçıl protestolar, Kasım 2022’de Çin’in birçok yerinde alevlendi. Son yıllarda Çinli yetkililer yaygın ve sistematik insan hakları ihlalleri gerçekleştirmiş ve Uygur öğrencileri, akademisyenleri ve Artuş’taki Uygur kültürel elitinin diğer üyelerini hedef almıştır.[1] 2017’den bu yana bilinen 386 Uygur vakası gözaltına alınmış, kaybedilmiş veya hapsedilmiştir.

Bu makale Kamile Wayit’in durumu ve serbest bırakılması için yapılan acil çağrı hakkında daha derinlemesine bilgi vermektedir.

Kamile Wayit’in gözaltına alınması

Kamile Wayit, Çin’in Henan kentinde yaşayan 19 yaşında bir Uygur Müslüman ve üniversite öğrencisi. 12 Aralık 2022 tarihinde Kamile, kış tatili için memleketi Artuş’tan (Sincan) döndükten sonra yerel Artuş şehir polisi tarafından gözaltına alındı. Kamile’nin ABD’de yaşayan erkek kardeşi Kewser Wayit’e göre Kamile, beyaz kağıt protestolarıyla ilgili olarak internette yayınladığı bir video nedeniyle hedef alındı. 2 Şubat 2023 tarihinde Kewser Wayit, Çinli yetkililere çağrıda bulunarak kız kardeşinin derhal serbest bırakılmasını ve kendisiyle konuşmasına izin verilmesini talep etti. Kız kardeşinin “masum olduğunu ve hiçbir suç işlemediğini” belirtti.”[2] Şu an itibariyle Kamile Aralık 2022’den beri gözaltında tutuluyor. Dahası, ailesiyle herhangi bir iletişim kurmasına veya istediği bir avukata sahip olmasına izin verilmiyor. Dahası, Kamile işkence ve diğer kötü muameleye maruz kalabilir.

Kamile’nin serbest bırakılması için acil çağrı

Kamile’nin gözaltına alınma gerekçeleri belirsizdir ve Kamile’nin tutuklanması Ayrımcılık Özgürlüğü ve Düşünce ve İfade Özgürlüğü ile ilgili sorunları gündeme getirmektedir. Bu nedenle Kamile, uluslararası kabul görmüş bir suç işlediğine dair yeterli, inandırıcı ve kabul edilebilir kanıtlar olmadığı sürece derhal serbest bırakılmalıdır. Ayrıca, serbest bırakılana kadar Kamile’nin nerede olduğu açıklanmalı ve ailesiyle ve seçtiği bir avukatla düzenli olarak görüşmesine izin verilmelidir. Son olarak, serbest bırakılana kadar Kamile’nin yeterli tıbbi bakıma erişiminin sağlanması ve işkence ve diğer kötü muameleye maruz kalmaması sağlanmalıdır.

Harekete geçin!

Uluslararası insan haklarını savunan bir sivil toplum kuruluşu olan Uluslararası Af Örgütü, bir itiraz dilekçesi yazma veya bir dilekçeyi imzalama şeklinde harekete geçme çağrısında bulundu. Bir itirazda bulunarak veya dilekçeyi imzalayarak Kamile’ye yardım edebilir ve onun sağlığını korumaya çalışabilirsiniz. Lütfen Çin’e gidin: Uygur öğrenci protesto videosu paylaştığı için gözaltına alındı: Kamile Wayit – Uluslararası Af Örgütü’ne başvurarak örnek bir mektup yazabilir ya da dilekçeyi imzalamak için Link’e gidebilirsiniz.

Sonuç

Bu makale, Artuş’ta Uygur öğrencilerin, akademisyenlerin ve Uygur kültürel elitinin diğer üyelerinin hedef alınmasını, Uluslararası Af Örgütü gibi Kamile Wayit’in durumuna özellikle dikkat çekerek tartışmıştır.

Ayrıca Broken Chalk, Çin hükümetini etnik kökenleri, dinleri veya temel insan haklarını barışçıl bir şekilde kullanmaları nedeniyle gözaltına alınan ve mahkum edilen herkesi derhal serbest bırakmaya çağırmaktadır. Ayrıca Broken Chalk, uluslararası toplumu Çin hükümetinin Uygur Entelektüellere yönelik vicdansız zulmünü acilen kınamaya çağırmaktadır.

Asha Ouni tarafindan yazıldı

İlhan Dağ tarafından çevirildi

[1] UHRP, “Detained and Disappeared: Intellectuals Under Assault in the Uyghur Homeland”, March 2019, available at: Microsoft Word – UHRP_Intellectuals Report Update 3.docx (accessed on 12/04/2023).

[2] RFA, “U.S.-based Uyghur man calls on China to release his 19-year-old sister”, Jane Tang for RFA Mandarin, 26/01/2023, available at: US-based Uyghur man calls on China to release his 19-year-old sister — Radio Free Asia (rfa.org) (accessed on 12/04/2023).

كاميل وايت، طالبة أويغورية من الصين تم احتجازها بعد نشر فيديو

اندلعت احتجاجات سلمية في نوفمبر 2022 في عدة مناطق في الصين، والتي تُعرف بـ “احتجاجات الورقة البيضاء” نتيجة حريق حصار مميت في 24 نوفمبر 2022 وسياسة القضاء على فيروس كورونا  في الصين بشكل عام. تسبب الحريق في وفاة عشرة أشخاص على الأقل.  قامت السلطات الصينية  في السنوات الأخيرة بانتهاكات واسعة ومنهجية لحقوق الإنسان واستهداف طلاب وعلماء أويغور وغيرهم من أعضاء المثقفين أويغور في آرتوش[1]. منذ عام 2017، تم احتجاز 386 حالة معروفة لأويغور أو اختفائهم أو سجنهم. يناقش  هذا المقال المزيد من التفاصيل حول قضية كاميل وايت والنداء العاجل لإطلاق سراحها.

اعتقال كاميل وايت:

كاميل وايت هي طالبة جامعية مسلمة أويغورية تبلغ من العمر 19 عامًا وتعيش في هنان بالصين. تم احتجاز كاميل من قبل شرطة مدينة آرتوش المحلية في 12 ديسمبر 2022 بعد عودتها من آرتوش (شينجيانغ)، مسقط رأسها، لقضاء عطلة الشتاء. وفقًا لأخ كاميل، كوسير وايت المقيم في الولايات المتحدة، تم استهدافها بسبب فيديو نشرته عبر الإنترنت حول احتجاجات الورقة البيضاء. في 2 فبراير 2023، دعا كوسير وايت وطالب السلطات الصينية بإطلاق سراح شقيقته فورًا والسماح لها بالحديث إليه. وأكد أن شقيقته “بريئة ولم ترتكب أي جرائم”[2]. حتى الآن، تم احتجاز كاميل منذ ديسمبر 2022. كما لا يسمح لها بالاتصال بعائلتها أو اختيار محامي. وهناك احتمالية أن كاميل تعرضت للتعذيب والمعاملة السيئة الأخرى.

نداء عاجل لإطلاق سراح كاميل.

لم يتضح بعد أسباب احتجاز كاميل، ويثير اعتقالها قضايا تتعلق بحرية التمييز وحرية الرأي والتعبير. لذلك، يجب إطلاق سراح كاميل فورًا ما لم يكن هناك دليل كاف وموثوق وقابل للاعتماد على أنها ارتكبت جريمة معروفة دوليًا. علاوة على ذلك، يجب الإفصاح عن مكان تواجد كاميل في انتظار إطلاق سراحها، ويجب السماح لها بالوصول المنتظم إلى عائلتها ومحامٍ من اختيارها. وأخيرًا، في انتظار إطلاق سراحها، يجب التأكد من توفير رعاية طبية كافية لكاميل وعدم تعرضها للتعذيب أو المعاملة السيئة الأخرى.

تحرّك!

دعت منظمة العفو الدولية، وهي منظمة غير حكومية تدافع عن حقوق الإنسان الدولية، إلى التحرّك عبر كتابة نداء أو توقيع عريضة. يمكنك مساعدة كاميل والسعي لحماية سلامتها من خلال تسجيل نداء أو توقيع العريضة. يرجى الانتقال إلى China: Uyghur student detained for posting protest video: Kamile Wayit – Amnesty International للاطلاع على نموذج رسالة لكتابة نداء، أو الانتقال إلى هذا الرابط لتوقيع العريضة.

في النهاية:

تناول هذا المقال استهداف الطلاب والعلماء وأعضاء النخبة الثقافية الأويغور في آرتوش، مع التركيز بشكل خاص على قضية كاميل وايت.تدعو بروكن تشاك مثل منظمة العفو الدولية إلى اتخاذ إجراءات و تلبية الحاجة الملحة لإطلاق سراح كاميل. بالإضافة إلى ذلك، تدعو بروكن تشاك حكومة الصين إلى إطلاق سراح جميع المحتجزين والمحكوم عليهم بسبب عرقهم أو دينهم أو ممارسة حقوقهم الأساسية للإنسان بشكل سلمي. كما تدعو المجتمع الدولي إلى إدانة بشكل عاجل اضطهاد حكومة الصين للفكريين الأويغور.

كتابة: Asha Ouni

Translated by Nedaa Mohamed from Kamile Wayit, an Uyghur student from China detained after posting a video

[1] UHRP, “Detained and Disappeared: Intellectuals Under Assault in the Uyghur Homeland”, March 2019, available at: Microsoft Word – UHRP_Intellectuals Report Update 3.docx (accessed on 12/04/2023).

[2] RFA, “U.S.-based Uyghur man calls on China to release his 19-year-old sister”, Jane Tang for RFA Mandarin, 26/01/2023, available at: US-based Uyghur man calls on China to release his 19-year-old sister — Radio Free Asia (rfa.org) (accessed on 12/04/2023).

Education Challenges in China

Written by Luna A. Duran van Tijn

According to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development ([OECD], 2016) “China has the largest education system in the world”, with almost 260 million students and over 15 million teachers in about 514,000 schools. While China prides itself in its advancements in the educational sector and has in fact paid a great deal of attention to its shortcomings, this article reveals that with such a large system come many challenges.

Setting the stage: China’s education system

Education bears great importance for the Chinese government (OECD, 2016). China has continued to invest heavily in its educational system on an absolute basis. Over the past 10 years, China has raised its educational spending by an average of 19%. With its belief that education is the foundation for national growth and modernisation, ensuring the compatibility of the system with the nation’s rate of such growth and modernisation as well as new educational demands and trends has meant continuous modifications and development in education reforms and programmes (OECD, 2016).

A particularly significant development in Chinese educational history was the Law on Compulsory Education passed in 1986, which held that all school-age children of Chinese nationality are entitled to compulsory education, and parents are responsible for registering their children in school and ensuring that they complete the required nine years of education (OECD, 2016). This law built an exhaustive system, outlining standards for schools, instructors, teaching and learning, as well as for funding education and the legal responsibilities of social sectors.  Since the legislation was changed in 2006, all students enrolled in compulsory education are now exempt from paying tuition and other fees. Moreover, according to the law’s 2015 revision, textbook prices are limited to marginal profit (OECD, 2016).

As to the specifics, China’s education system is managed by the state, with limited involvement from private companies, and continues to grow more decentralised (OECD, 2016). The Ministry of Education has recently moved away from direct control of the educational system and towards system-wide monitoring, directing educational reform through legislative initiatives, plans, financial support, informational services, policy recommendations, and administrative tools. Governments at the county level are in charge of running and providing education in schools. Most of the time, provincial governments are in charge of managing higher education institutions (OECD, 2016).

As has been previously stated, students must complete nine years of compulsory education (OECD, 2016). Figure 2 presents a chart with an overview of the organisation of China’s education system. Prior to the 1990s, secondary schools accepted students based on the results of admission exams. The government has replaced the entrance exam for secondary school with a policy of mandatory enrollment based on the area of residence (hukou) to emphasise the compulsory nature of junior secondary schools and as part of an attempt to shift the focus of education away from test scores and towards a more integrated approach to learning (OECD, 2016).

Students have the option to continue with senior secondary education after completing the compulsory education (OECD, 2016). General senior secondary, technical or specialised secondary, adult secondary, vocational secondary, and crafts schools are the five different categories of senior secondary schools in China. Prior to enrolling in senior secondary schools, students must take the Zhongkao, a public test whose results determine admission. The government assigns pupils to various senior secondary schools based on these scores. In recent years, China has made major efforts to increase enrollment in secondary vocational schools in order to satisfy the rapidly changing economic and labour demands of the nation. Despite the fact that senior secondary education is not required in China, 95% of junior secondary school graduates completed their studies there in 2014, a particularly significant figure considering it was only around 40% in 2005 (OECD, 2016).

The first ten years of the twenty-first century saw a significant increase in tertiary education in China as well (OECD, 2016). The gross enrollment ratio for postsecondary education in China increased from 21% in 2006 to 39% in 2014. Various institutions and initiatives were founded during this time, and there was a significant increase in the promotion of international collaboration and mobility. The tertiary education system become more varied as a result. Undergraduate programmes’ admissions are based on students’ college entrance examination (gaokao) scores. Admissions at the graduate level are based on another entrance examination (OECD, 2016).

Main challenges to the Chinese education system 

  1. Too large an emphasis on tests 

As has been touched on in the Background section, test scores play a highly significant role in the education system in China. Although the country has replaced the entrance exam for secondary school with hukou, senior secondary education and undergraduate as well as graduate programmes still heavily rely on evaluation scores.

A departure from the former system, a New Curriculum Reform has been underway since 2001 that addresses every aspect of the educational system, including educational philosophy, goal, content, methodology, and assessment systems at all educational levels (OECD, 2016). The new approach changes the examination-focused study mode to lessen the load on the students by relying on a variety of metrics for student achievements. The goal of this new evaluation method is to assist students in realising their potential, understanding who they are, and gaining confidence. Teachers should be able to examine and enhance their teaching techniques with the aid of the evaluation system. The new assessment system mandates periodic evaluation of curriculum implementation and study of implementation-related issues in order to assist schools in developing their curriculum systems (OECD, 2016).

Major adjustments are also being made to the gaokao (OECD, 2016). In 2014, the State Council released formal recommendations for the gaokao system overhaul. To lessen the impact of standardised testing, changes have been made to examinations at various levels. This examination reform attempts to create a contemporary examination system made up of standardised exams, thorough evaluation, and various admittance criteria. It also seeks to support overall education system change. As agreed upon with the central government, Shanghai and the province of Zhejiang will serve as the new system’s experimental pilot regions. Each province has created its own strategy to implement this change. Other towns and provinces have also revealed their own reform initiatives for the gaokao, including Beijing, Jiangsu and Guangdong (OECD, 2016).

Still, however, many sources within China as well as reports highlight the still-existing emphasis on test scores. In an article by Didi Kristen Tatlow (2014) in the New York Times, professor of education at the University of Oregon Yong Zhao revealed that the fundamental disregard for children’s individuality, hobbies, and passions in the Chinese educational system has resulted in a uniform student body. Because it compels students to spend practically all of their free time studying for exams, it leaves little time for leisurely pursuits like exercise. The intense rivalry also puts Chinese students under a lot of stress, which can harm their confidence and impair their self-esteem. Zhao also claimed a meaningful education, which focuses more on assisting each kid in growing than on pressuring them to get high test scores, is hampered in China by an overemphasis on test results (Tatlow, 2014).

In another article, one by Mark Kitto (2012) for Prospect Magazine, the focus on testing and scores is further illustrated as Kitto states that “the domestic Chinese lower education system does not educate. It is a test centre. The curriculum is designed to teach children how to pass them.” He continues, “schools do not produce well-rounded, sociable, self-reliant young people with inquiring minds. They produce winners and losers. Winners go on to college or university to take “business studies.” Losers go back to the farm or the local factory their parents were hoping they could escape” (Kitto, 2012).

Finally, reports on Chinese schools have led education experts to contend that this emphasis on exam-based education is the main cause of China’s high dropout rate (Moxley, 2010). A study by Northeast Normal University’s Institute of Rural Education from May claimed that the dropout rate in some rural areas was as high as 40 percent. The findings were ascribed in the research to “school weariness,” or exhaustion and apathy brought on by memorization drills and cramming (Moxley, 2010).

  1. A cutthroat system and mental health 

Worthy of its own section, albeit related to the previous challenge ascribed to the large emphasis on test scores, are the consequences on the mental health of Chinese students as a result of the harsh educational system in China.

According to the Annual Report on China’s Education (2014), or the Blue Book of Education, researchers closely examined 79 elementary and middle school suicide cases from 2013 and discovered that nearly all – 92 percent – occurred after a teen had experienced stress related to school, in some cases an argument with a teacher (Xinying, 2014). The second part of the school year, when children often suffer higher stress because of high school and college admission examinations, saw a 63 percent increase. The study included cases such as that of a middle school student in Hohhot who committed suicide by jumping off a building after learning that his test scores had dropped and of a 13-year-old boy in Nanjing who hanged himself at home for failing to finish his homework. The case of a girl in Sichuan province who cut her wrist and ingested poison afterlearning the results of her college entrance exam was also included. Suicides like these reveal the immense pressure students feel in China as a result of their studies, a concerning image of its educational system (Xinying, 2014).

  1. The rural-urban gap 

A third, rather crucial challenge to China’s education system has to do with the large gap between access to education in rural China compared to its urban counterparts.

China’s unprecedented levels and rates of urbanisation, with the urban population approximately tripling, hundreds of millions of Chinese have seen their quality of life improve and transformed by urbanisation (OECD, 2016). Nonetheless, it has also brought forth a number of significant societal problems. Among the most important issue is equal access to education. Not only should every child have access to school, but they should also have equal access to quality education.

Although the Chinese government has prioritised educational equity in compulsory education through a number of programmes in order to narrow the rural-urban gap, these have only solved a part of the problem (OECD, 2016). For instance, improvements have been made in infrastructural areas but even while the educational environment is improved, other considerations, such as fewer opportunities for advancement and a poorer standard of living in rural regions, make the teaching force deficit a significant issue. In this regard, policies have been made to attract more teachers in rural areas, but there is more required than just policies; broader efforts to improve social and economic opportunities in less developed parts of the country need to be addressed first (OECD, 2016).

An opinion piece by Helen Gao (2014) for the New York Times also explores this, arguing that “While many of their urban peers attend schools equipped with state-of-the-art facilities and well-trained teachers, rural students often huddle in decrepit school buildings and struggle to graspadvanced subjects such as English and chemistry amid a dearth of qualified instructors.” Additionally, she highlights research showing that a candidate from Beijing has a 41-fold higher chance of being accepted to ‘Peking University’ than a comparable applicant from the underdeveloped, predominantly rural province of Anhui (Gao, 2014).

Gao’s (2014) piece also connected the rural-urban gap to corruptive practices, stating “Parents fork out tens of thousands of dollars under the guise of “voluntary donations” to secure a slot for their children in elite elementary schools. (…) Further advantage can be purchased by parents who can pay handsomely to hire teachers to offer extra tutoring to their children, a practice discouraged by the authorities but widespread in reality” (Gao, 2014).

An added challenge to the presented gap stems from the hukou system (OECD, 2016). Large-scale internal migration brought on by China’s economic growth has substantial educational implications for both families and the government. With neighbourhood residency as the main basis for determining school enrolment in China, this means that migrant children must remain the same as their place of birth. Those who choose to remain with their parents will have restricted access to schooling  (OECD, 2016). Gao (2014) also touches on the effects of this as she explains that the hukou system denies rural children the right to enter urban public schools, forcing many of these migrant children to attend private schools that charge higher tuition fees. The unfortunate reality for many, she states, is that they “have no choice but to send their children back to their rural hometowns. Then, on the other hand, there are the children who separate from their parents and stay in their home regions, commonly referred to as “left-behind” children. They, more often than not, suffer from both mental health and educational effects (Gao, 2014).

  1. Authoritarianism in higher education

According to political scientist Elizabeth J. Perry (2015), China’s Communist party-state has created a variety of techniques to monitor and control student behaviour. Politically dependable peers serve as the leaders of the “homerooms” (banji) and “class years” (nianji)  and act as a conduit for information to and from the university administration. Peer pressure and oversight are integrated into the professional monitoring hierarchy. The “guidance counsellors” (fudaoyuan), trained employees entrusted with maintaining careful tabs on their student charges to ensure that their ideas and behaviour do not cross predetermined lines, form the cornerstone of the control system.  These guidance counsellors, who are aided by student informants, report directly to the deputy party secretaries responsible for student work (Perry, 2015).

These control procedures have even “modernised” in recent years thanks to new methodologies and tools (Perry, 2015). For instance, mental health facilities are now a common sight on Chinese college campuses. However, in China, the term “mental illness” is used to refer to beliefs and tendencies that the government deems to be politically dangerous, and the findings of the required mental health screenings given to first-year students are shared with political cadres for analysis and potential preventative or punitive action. Furthermore, the proliferation of the internet and social media has made it possible to gauge (and direct) student opinion in yet another “modernised” way. Counsellors and cadres counteract suspicious or subversive information on popular social media platforms (such as Weibo and WeChat) by commissioning counter-posts that support the officially sanctioned viewpoint in addition to censoring it (Perry, 2015).

In an effort to sway student sentiment in favour of the CCP’s objectives, the party-state uses both proactive and reactive methods (Perry, 2015). Military training (junxun) and ideological and political education (sixiang zhengzhi jiaoyu) have been required courses at universities since the 1990s. These lessons and activities aim to instil dispositions and conduct that support the dictatorship. Teaching “cultural proficiency” (wenhua sushi) and “national character” (guoqing), which present Chinese history, art, philosophy, and literature in ways that present a natural relationship and fundamental compatibility between the splendours of China’s ancient “tradition” and its modern “socialist” system, has gained importance in recent years. As such, universities are a crucial element of a vast party-state project in cultural governance that aims to persuade people that CCP rule is justified by “Chinese characteristics” that make it both essential and natural (Perry, 2015).

Key takeaways

Although education in China has become a priority in recent decades, and has made great progress in its achievements and reforms, the country still faces some significant challenges. From an overemphasis on test scores that fail to create more well-rounded students and has adverse effects on students’ mental health to discrepancies brought about by the rural-urban gap, China needs to reform their zhongkao, gaokao and hukou systems to ensure a more balanced, equitable, quality education for all.

The fourth challenge discussed in this article, namely the control and subtle propaganda systems infiltrating the higher education levels in China, from a democratic perspective, limits students’ ability to form essential critical abilities. This challenge in particular is one that seems difficult to see addressed as it is actively pursued by the government and would therefore, rather than be seen as a challenge, be seen as a tool.  This makes this challenge particularly complex.

 

Reference list 

Chen, Y. (2017). Issues of the Chinese Education System. Leadership Society of Arizona. https://leadaz.org/2017/03/13/issues-chinese-education-system/

Gao, H. (2014). China’s Education Gap. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/05/opinion/sunday/chinas-education-gap.html

Kitto, M. (2012). You’ll Never be Chinese. Prospect Magazine. https://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/politics/50279/youll-never-be-chinese

Moxley, M. (2010). CHINA: Alarming School Dropout Rate Blamed on Teaching Methods. Global Issues. https://www.globalissues.org/news/2010/06/30/6153

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (2016). Education in China. A Snapshot. https://www.oecd.org/china/Education-in-China-a-snapshot.pdf

Perry, E. J. (2015). Higher Education and Authoritarian Resilience: The Case of China, Past and Present. Harvard-Yenching Institute Working Paper Series. http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:30822717

Tatlow, D. K. (2014). Q. and A.: Yong Zhao on Education and Authoritarianism in China. The New York Times. https://archive.nytimes.com/sinosphere.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/09/14/q-and-a-yong-zhao-on-education-and-authoritarianism-in-china/

Xinying, Z. (2014). School Tests Blamed for Suicides. China dailyhttps://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2014-05/14/content_17505291.htm

Kamile Wayit, una estudiante Uyghur china es detenida después de colgar un video

En noviembre de 2022, protestas pacíficas, conocidas como las “protestas del papel blanco”, se esparcieron por todo el territorio Chino como consecuencia de un incendio mortal desatendido por las restricciones de la Política Zero-Covid, y las consecuencias genéricas de tal política. El incendio causó la muerte de 10 personas como mínimo. En los últimos años, las autoridades chinas han participado en extensas y sistemáticas vulneraciones de derechos humanos, atacando a estudiantes Uyghur, académicos, y otros miembros de la élite cultural Uyghur en Artush[1]. Des de 2017, ha habido 386 casos de Uyghurs detenidos, internados o enviados a prisión.

El presente artículo analiza con más profundidad el caso de Kamile Wayit y la necesidad urgente de su liberación.

La detención de Kamile Wayit

Kamile Wayit es una chica de 19 años musulmana Uyghur, estudiante de Universidad viviendo en Henan, China. El 12 de diciembre de 2022, Kamile fue tomada y detenida por la policía local de Artush, su pueblo natal al que volvía por vacaciones de invierno. Según el hermano de Kamile, Kewser Wayit, residente en EEUU, ella fue detenida debido a un vídeo que colgó en las redes sobre las protestas del papel blanco. El 2 de febrero de 2023, Kewser Wayit llamó a las autoridades chinas y demandó la liberación inmediata de su hermana y establecer contacto con ella. Él clarificó contundentemente que su hermana era “inocente y que no había cometido ningún crimen”.[2] Actualmente, Kamile ha estado en un centro de detención dese diciembre de 2022. Ella está completamente incomunicada de su familia y no tiene acceso a un abogado de su elección. Además, puede que esté sufriendo torturas y malos tratos.

Llamada Urgente para la liberación de Kamile

Las razones por las que detuvieron a Wayit no son claras, el arresto de Kamile plantea cuestiones de discriminación y libertad de expresión. Tanto es así, que Kamile tendría que ser liberada inmediatamente a menos que haya evidencia admisible, creíble y suficiente de que haya cometido una ofensa criminal reconocible. Además, mientras se procese la liberación de Kamile, su localización actual debería hacerse pública, y ella debería tener acceso regular a contactar su familia y abogados de su elección. Finalmente, también mientras esté reclusa, se debería asegurar acceso sanitario adecuado a Kamile, garantizando también que no se encuentre sujeta a tortura o malos tratos.

Toma Acción!

Amnistía Internacional, una organización no gubernamental que aboga por los derechos humanos, ha hecho una llamada general a tomar acción respecto a esta situación a través de una petición de firmas o presentando un recurso legal. A través de estas acciones es posible ayudar a Kamile y proteger su bienestar. Para hacerlo, puede acceder a: Una estudiante Uyghur es detenida por colgar un video: Kamile Wayit – Amnistía Internacional, para ver los modelos de escrito de apelación, o vaya al link para firmar la petición.

Conclusión:

Este articulo ha explorado la opresión de estudiantes Uyghurs, académicos y otros miembros de la élite cultural Uyghur en Artush, con especial atención a Kamile Wayit. Igual que Amnistía Internacional, Broken Chalk demanda acción urgente para liberar a Kamile.

Asimismo, Broken Chalk pide al gobierno Chino que libere inmediatamente a todos los detenidos y sentenciados por razón de etnicidad, religión, o cualquier ejercicio pacífico de derechos humanos fundamentales. Adicionalmente, Broken Chalk llama a la comunidad internacional a condenar urgentemente la persecución injustificable de intelectuales Uyghurs por parte del gobierno chino.

Escrito por Asha Ouni

Traducido por Joan Vilalta Flo

[1] UHRP, “Detained and Disappeared: Intellectuals Under Assault in the Uyghur Homeland”, March 2019, available at: Microsoft Word – UHRP_Intellectuals Report Update 3.docx (accessed on 12/04/2023).

[2] RFA, “U.S.-based Uyghur man calls on China to release his 19-year-old sister”, Jane Tang for RFA Mandarin, 26/01/2023, available at: US-based Uyghur man calls on China to release his 19-year-old sister — Radio Free Asia (rfa.org) (accessed on 12/04/2023).

Kamile Wayit, studenă Uyghur din China reținută după ce a postat un videoclip

În noiembrie 2022, proteste pașnice, denumite „protestele foilor albe de hârtie”, au fost declanșate în mai multe locații din China din cauza unui incendiu fatal de  pe 24 noiembrie 2022 și a politicii Chinei de zero COVID în general. Incendiul a provocat moartea a cel puțin zece persoane. În ultimii ani, autoritățile chineze au comis încălcări pe scară largă și sistematice ale drepturilor omului și au vizat studenții, savanții și alți membri ai elitei culturale uiguuri din Artush[1] . Din 2017, 386 de cazuri cunoscute de uiguri internați, dispăruți sau închiși au fost înregistarte.

Acest articol detaliază cazul lui Kamile Wayit și apelul urgent pentru eliberarea ei.

 

Detenția lui Kamile Wayit

Kamile Wayit este o musulmancă uigur în vârstă de 19 ani și studentă  care locuiește în Henan, China. La 12 decembrie 2022, Kamile a fost luată de poliția locală a orașului Artush și reținută după ce s-a întors din Artush (Xinjiang), orașul ei natal, pentru o vacanță de iarnă. Potrivit fratelui lui Kamile, Kewser Wayit, cu sediul în SUA, ea a fost vizată din cauza unui videoclip pe care l-a postat online cu privire la protestele foilor albe de hârtie.  La 2 februarie 2023, Kewser Wayit a sunat și a cerut autorităților chineze să îi elibereze imediat sora și să o lase să vorbească cu el. El a declarat că sora lui este „nevinovată și nu a comis nicio crimă” [2] .. De acum, Kamile se află în detenție din decembrie 2022. Mai mult, nu are voie să aibă niciun contact cu familia ei sau să aibă un avocat la alegere. În plus, Kamile poate fi supusă torturii și altor rele tratamente.

Apel urgent pentru eliberarea lui Kamile

Motivele detenției lui Kamile sunt neclare, iar arestarea lui Kamile ridică probleme cu privire la libertatea discriminării și libertatea de opinie și exprimare. Prin urmare, Kamile ar trebui eliberată imediat, cu excepția cazului în care există dovezi suficiente, credibile și admisibile că ea a săvârșit o infracțiune penală recunoscută la nivel internațional. Mai mult, în așteptarea eliberării, locul unde se află Kamile ar trebui să fie eliberat și ar trebui să i se permită acces regulat la familia ei și la un avocat la alegerea ei. De asemenea, în așteptarea eliberării sale, ar trebui să se asigure că Kamile are acces la îngrijire medicală adecvată și nu este supusă torturii și altor rele tratamente.

Ia măsuri!

Amnesty International, o organizație non-guvernamentală care susține drepturile internaționale ale omului, a cerut să se acționeze sub forma redactării unui apel sau semnării unei petiții. Înregistrând o contestație sau semnând petiția, o poți ajuta pe Kamile și să încerci să-i protejezi bunăstarea. Vă rugăm să mergeți în China: un student uigur reținut pentru că a postat un videoclip de protest: Kamile Wayit – Amnesty International pentru a vedea modelul de scrisoare pentru scrierea unei contestații sau accesați Link pentru a semna petiția.

Concluzie

Acest articol a discutat despre țintirea studenților, cercetătorilor și a altor membri ai elitei culturale uigure din Artush, acordând o atenție deosebită cazului lui Kamile Wayit, cum ar fi Amnesty International, Broken Chalk solicită acțiuni și nevoia urgentă de eliberare a lui Kamile.

În plus, Broken Chalk solicită guvernului Chinei să elibereze imediat toți cei reținuți și condamnați pentru etnie, religie sau exercitarea pașnică a drepturilor fundamentale ale omului. În plus, Broken Chalk face apel la comunitatea internațională să condamne de urgență persecuția inadmisibilă de către guvernul chinez a intelectualilor uiguri

 

Scris de Asha Ouni

 

 

[1] UHRP, “Detained and Disappeared: Intellectuals Under Assault in the Uyghur Homeland”, March 2019, available at: Microsoft Word – UHRP_Intellectuals Report Update 3.docx (accessed on 12/04/2023).

[2] RFA, “U.S.-based Uyghur man calls on China to release his 19-year-old sister”, Jane Tang for RFA Mandarin, 26/01/2023, available at: US-based Uyghur man calls on China to release his 19-year-old sister — Radio Free Asia (rfa.org) (accessed on 12/04/2023).

Kamile Wayit, an Uyghur student from China detained after posting a video

In November 2022, peaceful protests, referred to as “white paper protests”, sparked in multiple locations in China due to a fatal lockdown fire on 24 November 2022 and China’s zero-COVID policy in general. The fire had caused the death of at least ten people. In recent years, the Chinese authorities carried out widespread and systematic human rights violations and targeted Uyghur students, scholars, and other members of the Uyghur cultural elite in Artush.[1] Since 2017, 386 known cases of Uyghurs have been interned, disappeared, or imprisoned.

This Article goes into more depth about the case of Kamile Wayit and the urgent call for her release. 

The detention of Kamile Wayit

Kamile Wayit is a 19-year-old Uyghur Muslim and college student living in Henan, China. On 12 December 2022, Kamile was taken by the local Artush city police and detained after she had returned from Artush (Xinjiang), her hometown, for a winter break. According to Kamile’s brother, U.S.-based Kewser Wayit, she was targeted because of a video she posted online regarding the white paper protests. On 2 February 2023, Kewser Wayit called on and demanded that the Chinese authorities release his sister immediately and let her speak to him. He stated that his sister is “innocent and committed no crime.”[2] As of now, Kamile has been in detention since December 2022. Moreover, she is not allowed to have any contact with her family or to have a lawyer of choice. Moreover, Kamile may be subjected to torture and other ill-treatment. 

Urgent call for Kamile’s release

The grounds for Kamile’s detention are unclear, and Kamile’s arrest raises issues regarding the Freedom of Discrimination and the Freedom of Opinion and Expression. Therefore, Kamile should be released immediately unless there is sufficient, credible and admissible evidence that she has committed an internationally recognised criminal offence. Moreover, pending her release, Kamile’s whereabouts should be released, and she should be allowed regular access to her family and a lawyer of her choice. Lastly, pending her release, it should be ensured that Kamile has access to adequate medical care and is not subjected to torture and other ill-treatment. 

Take action!

Amnesty International, a non-governmental organisation standing up for international human rights, has called for action in the form of writing an appeal or signing a petition. By registering an appeal or signing the petition, you can help Kamile and try to protect her well-being. Please go to China: Uyghur student detained for posting protest video: Kamile Wayit – Amnesty International to see the model letter for writing an appeal, or go to Link to sign the petition.

Conclusion

This article discussed the targeting of Uyghur students, scholars, and other members of the Uyghur cultural elite in Artush, with particular attention to the case of Kamile Wayit, like Amnesty International, Broken Chalk calls for action and the urgent need for Kamile’s release.

Furthermore, Broken Chalk calls on the government of China to immediately release all those detained and sentenced for their ethnicity, religion, or peaceful exercise of their fundamental human rights. In addition, Broken Chalk calls on the international community to urgently condemn the Chinese government’s unconscionable persecution of Uyghur Intellectuals.

 

Written by Asha Ouni

[1] UHRP, “Detained and Disappeared: Intellectuals Under Assault in the Uyghur Homeland”, March 2019, available at: Microsoft Word – UHRP_Intellectuals Report Update 3.docx (accessed on 12/04/2023).

[2] RFA, “U.S.-based Uyghur man calls on China to release his 19-year-old sister”, Jane Tang for RFA Mandarin, 26/01/2023, available at: US-based Uyghur man calls on China to release his 19-year-old sister — Radio Free Asia (rfa.org) (accessed on 12/04/2023).