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Adjudication of asylum claims (refugee status determination / asylum procedures) / Discrimination based on race, nationality, ethnicity

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RRT Case No. 1113716

4 July 2012 | Judicial Body: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Case Law | Topic(s): Discrimination based on race, nationality, ethnicity - Minorities - Muslim - Racial / Ethnic persecution - Uighur | Countries: Australia - China

RRT Case No. 1010720

7 July 2011 | Judicial Body: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Case Law | Topic(s): Credibility assessment - Discrimination based on race, nationality, ethnicity - Koreans - Persecution based on political opinion | Countries: Australia - China

China: 1. What is the status of Han Chinese living in Urumqi? Is there information in relation to whether a Han Chinese family would receive protection from the authorities if harassed by Uighurs? 2. Is it possible for a Han Chinese person with a Hukou registered in XUAR to return there at the present time? 3. Is there information regarding discrimination against Han Chinese from XUAR in other parts of China? 4. If a husband's Hukou is registered in Fujian province, are his Han Chinese wife from XUAR and her baby (born in Australia) entitled to live there? 5. Would a couple now be considered to be legally married in China, if their overseas marriage occurred when they were both 20 (below the marriageable age in China) and their child was born when they were 21? What ramifications might this have on the wife's ability to register a Hukou in the husband's province (Fujian)?

21 April 2011 | Publisher: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Query Responses

RRT Case No. 1002472

12 July 2010 | Judicial Body: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Case Law | Topic(s): Arbitrary arrest and detention - Discrimination based on race, nationality, ethnicity - Racial / Ethnic persecution - Uighur | Countries: Australia - China

China: 1. Although circumstances are not good for Uighurs in PRC generally, are there places where the situation is less oppressive for them or where they are more likely to be left alone by the authorities? 2. Have there been any significant changes/events relating to the PRC authorities and Uighurs in East Turkistan in recent months?

13 May 2010 | Publisher: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Query Responses

RRT Case No. 0909990

23 March 2010 | Judicial Body: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Case Law | Topic(s): Arbitrary arrest and detention - Country of origin information (COI) - Discrimination based on race, nationality, ethnicity - Persecution based on political opinion - Racial / Ethnic persecution - Religious persecution (including forced conversion) - Uighur | Countries: Australia - China

RRT Case No. 0906880

4 December 2009 | Judicial Body: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Case Law | Topic(s): Country of origin information (COI) - Discrimination based on race, nationality, ethnicity - Effective protection - Muslim - Persecution based on political opinion - Persecution of family members - Racial / Ethnic persecution - Religious persecution (including forced conversion) - Right to education - Right to employment - Social group persecution - Uighur | Countries: Australia - China

China: 1. Is a first child ever a "black child", for example where there is no father named on the birth certificate? 2. Do persons of Russian descent suffer harm in Xinjiang, China?

8 March 2007 | Publisher: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Query Responses

China: 1. What is the current security situation in the Solomon Islands with respect to foreigners and people of Chinese ethnicity in particular? 2. Is there a real risk of Chinese people suffering harm in the Solomon Islands? 3. What is the current population of Chinese persons in the Solomon Islands and what are they generally engaged in doing in the country? 4. What is the general attitude of the authorities including the courts, towards foreigners and their security? 5. Do disabled people suffer harm in China? 6. Are there government and NGO facilities for the disabled in China? 7. Are there government sponsored health programs to assist the needy? 8. Are there special facilities for the disabled? 9. Can you provide any information on access to basic medical and social services? 10. Are disabled children denied access to education? 11. Are there any programs deigned for the disabled in China? 12. Do the Chinese authorities allow Christians to practice their religion in the privacy of their homes? 13. To what countries could the standard of care in hospitals in China be compared to? 14. Question deleted

4 October 2006 | Publisher: Australia: Refugee Review Tribunal | Document type: Query Responses

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