Beijing— A comprehensive 72-page report released by Human Rights Watch on Wednesday, May 6, 2026, alleges that the Chinese government is systematically using preschool education to forcibly assimilate Tibetan children into a Han-dominated national identity. The report, titled “Start with the Youngest Children: China Uses Preschools to ‘Integrate’ Tibetans,” details how a 2021 Ministry of Education directive known as the Children’s Speech Harmonisation plan has effectively mandated the use of standard Mandarin Chinese for all instruction and caregiving in ethnic minority regions. By targeting children during a critical stage of language acquisition and personal identity formation, the organization argues that Beijing is accelerating the erosion of Tibetan language and culture.
The findings highlight that while kindergartens are technically permitted to offer supplementary sessions in minority languages, local communities no longer possess the legal authority to implement or protect these provisions. This policy shift is the culmination of decades of legislative changes, including the recent 2026 law on promoting ethnic unity and progress, which imposes penalties on individuals perceived to be obstructing the use of standard Chinese. According to the report, the impact on families is immediate and profound, with many parents observing that their children become reluctant or unable to speak their native Tibetan tongue even within the privacy of their own homes just weeks after enrolling in these institutions.
Although preschool education is not legally mandatory under Chinese law, Human Rights Watch found that it has become effectively compulsory in Tibetan regions. Many primary schools in urban centres now require proof of kindergarten attendance as a prerequisite for admission, leaving families with few alternatives but to participate in the state-mandated Mandarin-medium system. This pressure is further reinforced by reports of Chinese-language testing regimes in preschools and government requests for parents to speak Mandarin with their children at home, sometimes even requiring video evidence of these interactions.
Maya Wang, an associate director at Human Rights Watch, stated that this approach is not intended to improve educational standards but is rather an intensive effort to strip a generation of its native heritage. The report notes that religious elements, including Tibetan Buddhist customs and festivals, have been entirely excluded from the curriculum and replaced with political indoctrination and the celebration of traditional Han culture. The organization has urged the United Nations and foreign governments to pressure Beijing to reinstate meaningful bilingual education and permit independent monitors access to the region to investigate the long-term social consequences of these assimilationist policies.