Pages

19 September 2018

The Guardian view on Xinjiang: China’s secret camps are at last in the spotlight


It is unthinkable. Yet week by week, the evidence mounts that in north-western China’s Xinjiang region, as many as a million people are being held in extralegal indoctrination camps where inmates are forced to write self-criticisms, sing patriotic songs and chant slogans praising the Communist party. According to former detainees, people appear to have been pulled in because they went abroad, because they engaged in conventional religious practices, or even because they do not speak Chinese. Many are held indefinitely. Some say they were tortured. Most of those held are Uighurs, who make up less than half of the 23 million population of the region, or belong to Kazakh or other Muslim minorities. One report, drawing upon official sources, suggests some areas have detention quotas.


The camps are the most shocking aspect of an intense and all-encompassing crackdown, described by Human Rights Watch this week as amounting to rights violations of a scope and scale not seen in China since the Cultural Revolution unleashed in 1966. According to the group Chinese Human Rights Defenders, official data suggests a fifth of all arrests in China last year were in Xinjiang, which has just 1.5% of its population. The human cost is immense, as a new Guardian report reveals.

The ordeal does not end when people are released: they remain burdened by trauma and the fear they could be seized again. Xinjiang has become a digital police state, studded with checkpoints, security cameras and facial recognition technology. China has always kept an iron grip on Xinjiang, including through tight restrictions on religion and culture. But in 2014, after a series of more violent attacks that claimed dozens of lives, including suicide bombings and a knife attack in a train station, China launched an even harsher “Strike Hard Campaign”. The mass detentions, which began early last year, are a step further. One scholar warns that “an entire culture is being criminalised”.

China has said that the figure of a million detainees is completely untrue, that there is “no such thing” as re-education centres and that people enjoy freedom of religion. But it has also acknowledged that some Xinjiang residents caught in anti-terrorism campaigns had been taken to “vocational education” centres (Satellite images and tendering and other official documents show vast new facilities with watchtowers and barbed wire fences.) Other official sources have talked of “transformation through education”, which one government document described as “like a free hospital treatment for the masses with sick thinking”.

All this has been greeted, until very recently, by near-silence, including from majority-Muslim countries. “They’re scared. Nobody wants to say anything,” said Anwar Ibrahim, in line to be Malaysia’s next prime minister, when he raised it this week. The US now says it is “deeply troubled” by the crackdown; it is considering sanctions against officials and companies. The new UN human rights chief, Michelle Bachelet, used her maiden speech to urge China to grant monitors access in light of “deeply disturbing” reports. Beijing told her to respect its sovereignty, and accused the US of prejudice.

Xinjiang’s camps reflect the much more repressive turn China has taken generally in recent years, and perhaps the region’s geostrategic importance in the context of the Belt and Road Initiative, much of which runs through central Asia. But their flourishing also reflects the secrecy shrouding them and the indifference with which reports have been greeted, giving China no incentive at all to moderate its course. This should be the start of international pressure, not the end.

Since you’re here…

… we have a small favour to ask. More people are reading the Guardian than ever but advertising revenues across the media are falling fast. And unlike many news organisations, we haven’t put up a paywall – we want to keep our journalism as open as we can. So you can see why we need to ask for your help. The Guardian’s independent, investigative journalism takes a lot of time, money and hard work to produce. But we do it because we believe our perspective matters – because it might well be your perspective, too.

The Guardian is editorially independent, meaning we set our own agenda. Our journalism is free from commercial bias and not influenced by billionaire owners, politicians or shareholders. No one edits our Editor. No one steers our opinion. This is important because it enables us to give a voice to the voiceless, challenge the powerful and hold them to account. It’s what makes us different to so many others in the media, at a time when factual, honest reporting is critical.

No comments:

Post a Comment