Published: 13 March 2026. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online
China’s legislature has passed a highly controversial ethnic unity law that mandates greater emphasis on Mandarin Chinese across ethnic minority regions and school systems, a move that critics warn will accelerate cultural assimilation and weaken protections for minority identities. The law, formally titled the Law on Promoting Ethnic Unity and Progress, was overwhelmingly approved by the National People’s Congress, China’s top legislative body, on Thursday, reflecting the Chinese Communist Party’s longstanding policy priorities.
Under the legislation, the promotion of Mandarin — referred to as the national common language — is positioned at the centre of ethnic integration efforts. Schools in regions with significant minority populations such as Tibet, Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia are now required to prioritise Mandarin in instruction and official communication, including education, government affairs and public signage. This effectively means that Mandarin will be the basic language of teaching, while minority languages are formally relegated to supplementary status.
Beijing has framed the law as a means to foster “national unity” and enhance communication across China’s officially recognised 56 ethnic groups. Officials argue that Mandarin proficiency will expand opportunities for minority youths and facilitate social cohesion under the banner of shared national identity and development. State media and government spokespeople have described the legislation as consistent with long‑term efforts to promote equality and integration nationwide.
However, rights groups, legal analysts and international observers have sharply criticised the law, characterising it as a formalisation of assimilation policies that target cultural and linguistic distinctiveness. Human Rights Watch, academics and advocacy organisations warn that mandating Mandarin and downplaying minority languages undermines existing legal protections that previously allowed ethnic communities to preserve and use their native tongues. Critics argue the law institutionalises assimilation and erodes cultural rights, effectively constraining expression and communal identity outside the dominant Han culture.
The law’s provisions extend beyond education and language policy. They also promote “integration” through community life, migration, cultural exchange and other social spheres, while incorporating anti‑separatism measures and penalties for actions deemed to threaten ethnic unity. It includes mechanisms that could influence both domestic and foreign individuals or organisations seen as undermining Beijing’s vision of unity, a facet that has drawn concern from neighbouring governments, including officials in Taiwan who fear broad legal reach beyond China’s borders.
Rights advocates stress the broader implications of the legislation, noting that language is frequently a core aspect of minority identity and cultural heritage. They warn that codifying Mandarin’s primacy could accelerate the marginalisation of minority languages and traditions — especially in places where those languages already faced educational and administrative restrictions prior to the law’s passage. International legal standards on minority rights emphasise protections for linguistic diversity, and critics say the new law deviates sharply from those principles.
The passage of the ethnic unity law signals a deepening of Beijing’s integrationist agenda and will likely shape ethnic policy in China for years to come. Observers anticipate continued debate over its implementation and effects on communities where linguistic and cultural diversity have long been defining features of regional life.




























































































