China’s advanced surveillance regime is taking root along the length of the Belt and Road—especially the Belt, the overland Eurasian routes that were the origin of the government’s ambitious investment project. Recently, Kyrgyzstan opened a new police command center in its capital, Bishkek, putting its new facial recognition cameras to work. The equipment was supplied—reportedly free of charge—by the China National Electronics Import and Export Corporation, a defense company currently sanctioned by the United States.
The crackdown has also included ethnic Kazakhs and Kyrgyz, sparking popular backlash in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. The Kazakh government has made a number of arrests to prevent local activists from spreading news about the internment camps, fearful that such information could harm the country’s profitable relationship with Beijing. In Kyrgyzstan, authorities have taken a lighter approach, favoring fines and official warnings to anyone involved in perceived “anti-China” movements. Even Uzbekistan, the most reclusive of the three, has seen a recent crackdown on activists related to China.
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