Uyghur Tribunal

The Uyghur Tribunal was established in September 2020 as an independent people’s tribunal to investigate ‘ongoing atrocities and possible genocide’ against the Uyghurs, Kazakhs and other Turkic Muslim populations in the PRC.

Witnesses presented live evidence during two hearings in June and September 2021. The Tribunal’s goal was to review the evidence and reach a judgment on whether international crimes were proven to have been committed by the PRC, though as an independent tribunal, the Uyghur Tribunal had no powers of official sanction or enforcement.

The Tribunal’s judgment, published on 9 December 2021, was guided in its work by the Genocide Convention, the Convention on Torture (both signed and ratified by China), and, for alleged crimes against humanity, the ’Rome Statute’ of the International Criminal Court.

Key Reading:

Uyghur Tribunal Judgment

On 9th of December 2021, Sir Geoffrey Nice QC delivered the Uyghur Tribunal’s judgment.

Evidence Submitted to the Tribunal

This page covers all of the evidence submitted to the Tribunal, in the form of statements, transcripts and reports.

The Xinjiang Papers: An Introduction

The “Xinjiang Papers” are a cache of government documents from the PRC, most of them classified, that were originally leaked to the New York Times by a “member of the Chinese political establishment” and published in November 2019, though only a small number of transcribed pages were publicly released. In September 2021, a set of digital files was leaked to the Uyghur Tribunal based in London during the second set of hearings; careful comparison showed them to be identical to the Xinjiang Papers. The files contain highly sensitive and pertinent material in relation to Beijing’s policies in Xinjiang. This report, submitted to the Tribunal, contains a detailed overview of the documents.

The Xinjiang Papers: An Analysis of Key Findings and Implications for the Uyghur Tribunal in London

This report, submitted to the Tribunal, contains a detailed analysis of the Xinjiang Papers and what this evidence indicates about the central government’s role in Xinjiang policies, as well as the author’s resulting conclusions on the question of genocide.

Tribunal Hearings Session 1

View recordings of the first Tribunal hearings which took place between 4-7 June 2021.

Tribunal Hearings Session 2

View recordings of the second Tribunal hearings which took place between 10-13 September 2021.

Tribunal Hearings Session 3

View a recording of the third Tribunal hearing which took place virtually on 27th November 2021.

Relevant Legal Materials:

Genocide Convention

Convention Against Torture

Rome Statute

Further Reading

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