Job discrimination riles China’s Uighurs
| 
 URUMQI — Tursun’s eyes well up as she describes life as a Uighur in China, which she says is marred by overt discrimination in the job market — a source of much bitterness in the restive city of Urumqi. “There are so many young Uighurs here who have been  abroad, who speak perfect English, perfect Japanese,” the shopkeeper  says in the violence-scarred capital of far-western Xinjiang region. “But they can’t find good jobs despite that,” she says,  gesturing to rows of market stalls and the vendors minding them. “I’ve been for many job interviews here but they  wouldn’t hire me because I’m a Uighur.” Many  Uighurs in Xinjiang complain about what they say is a job market openly  skewed against them, with many of the better-paid professional and  technical jobs going to members of the country’s Han Chinese majority. That resentment boiled over on July 5 last year, when  some mainly Muslim Uighurs took to the streets of Urumqi in a protest  that descended into violence against the Han Chinese. Han mobs then  sought revenge in the following days. The  government said the unrest — the worst ethnic clashes in China for  decades — left nearly 200 dead and 1,700 injured. So far, 26 persons  have been sentenced to death for their roles in the mayhem. Source: The Daily Tribune URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100706com7.html | 
 | 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

0 comments
Post a Comment