UNPO Attends Rally for Uyghur People's Human Rights During UNPFII
The Uyghur people of East Turkestan (also known as the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of China) are enduring immense suffering at the hands of the Chinese government. Take to the streets around the United Nations in New York to: urge country missions and intergovernmental delegations to stay true to the founding principles of the United Nations and defend the basic human rights of the Uyghurs at the UN; and raise general awareness -- during the annual Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues at the UN -- of the Chinese government's relentless persecution and repression of the Uyghur people. We will walk to and hold demonstrations in front of several buildings containing various country missions and delegations to the UN.
4:00 pm - 4:30 pm (1st stop/demonstration)
4:30 pm - 4:40 pm Walk/march across 1st Avenue and through the full length of Dag Hammarskjold Plaza/Park to the 2nd Avenue side of the plaza/park.
4:40 pm - 5:00 pm (2nd stop/demonstration)
5:00 pm - 5:15 pm Walk/march down 2nd Avenue to 222 East 41st Street, which contains the Delegation of the European Union to the United Nations.
5:15 pm - 5:35 pm (3rd stop/demonstration)
5:35 pm - 5:45 pm Walk/march to Ralph Bunche Park (1st Avenue between E. 42nd Street and E. 43rd Street).
5:45 pm - 6:00 pm (4th stop/demonstration)
Directions by subway: All of the stops/demonstration s will be within walking distance from the Grand Central Terminal subway stop on the 4,5,6 trains and on the Shuttle (S) train from Times Square.
Organized by: The Uyghur American Association (www.uyghuramerican .org) and the International Uyghur Human Rights and Democracy Foundation (www.iuhrdf. org)
Background
The Uyghur people are indigenous to East Turkestan [also known as the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR) of China]. They are a Turkic, Central Asian people and their dominant religion is Sunni Islam. For many years, the Chinese government has waged an intense and often brutal campaign to repress all forms of Uyghur dissent, crack down on Uyghurs' peaceful religious activities and independent expressions of ethnicity, dilute Uyghurs' culture and identity as a distinct people, and threaten the survival of the Uyghur language. The authorities have routinely equated Uyghurs' peaceful political, religious, and cultural activities with the "three evils" – terrorism, separatism and religious extremism. The authorities have also economically marginalized the Uyghurs in East Turkestan through intense and blatant racial/ethnic discrimination in employment.
On July 5, 2009, Uyghurs in the city of Urumchi (the regional capital of East Turkestan) staged a peaceful protest that was brutally suppressed by Chinese security forces. Numerous witness accounts provided to human rights organizations abroad (including but not limited to Uyghur organizations) -- as well as witness accounts provided to the media – indicated that security forces committed extrajudicial killings of protestors. The human rights violations that the Chinese government committed during – and have committed in the aftermath – of the peaceful protest and the ethnic unrest in Urumchi in July 2009 have also included but have not been limited to, arbitrary detentions, enforced disappearances, arbitrary sentencing of individuals to death after trials plagued with politicization and intense strangleholds on due process, and arbitrary executions.
For more information, contact: Kathy Polias, United Nations Liaison, Uyghur American Association (www.uyghuramerican .org), Cell:347-285-6546, E-mails: kpolias@uyghurameri can.org, kathypolias@ gmail.com.