Senin 13 Jul 2015 20:34 WIB

Rights Group: China restricts passports for Tibetans

China
China

REPUBLIKA.CO.ID, BEIJING -- Beijing effectively restricts Tibetans and other ethnic minorities from obtaining passports, Human Rights Watch said Monday, amid a surge in Chinese tourists travelling abroad.

Chinese authorities have created a two-tier system, the report said, one for areas populated by the country's ethnic Han majority and another, more cumbersome system for areas inhabited by the country's Tibetan and Muslim minorities.

"If you are a religious minority who lives in a part of the country where most people are minorities, it's virtually impossible to get a passport," Sophie Richardson, China director at Human Rights Watch.

In most parts of China, a passport must be issued within 15 days, and if there is a delay the authorities must notify the applicant.

But in Tibet and Xinjiang, inhabited by 10 million Uighurs, a Turkic-speaking Muslim minority, officials use an older method for passport applications that requires more documents and sometimes political vetting, the report said.

Fewer than 10 percent of prefectures in China still use the older, slower system, with all but one inhabited mostly by ethnic minorities, according to the report.

Only two passports were issued in Tibet's Changdu prefecture in 2012 even though it has a population of 650,000 people.

Hundreds of Uighurs were detained last year for illegally entering Thailand, fleeing what rights groups say is religious persecution in China. The Uighurs claimed to be Turkish citizens, and 181 have been allowed to go to Turkey, with more than 100 others sent back to China.

Meanwhile, mainland Chinese travellers took more than 100 million "outbound" trips last year, according to government figures, although most visited Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan.

sumber : Antara
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