Monday 27 May 2019

China's Concentration Camps in East Turkestan

East Turkestan was occupied by China in 1949, and accordingly renamed to Xinjiang, which is currently the largest province in China. Uyghurs are the native residents of East Turkestan and many of them have vanished; estimates fluctuate between 800,000 and a few millions detained in a vast network of compounds, which the Chinese government calls reeducation centers, or centers for vocational training, while human rights activists around the world call them China’s Concentration Camps.



They are called Uyghurs or Uighurs, they are mainly Muslims, they speak the Turkic language, and they live in Xinjiang, the far north western part of China. China occupied this region, previously known as East Turkestan in 1949, and since then the Chinese governments have been worried about separatism among Uyghurs. Till now, separatists and other Uyghurs insist on maintaining their language and ethnic identity, as well as their religion(s) and East Turkestan as a name for the region. This is among the key reasons for the Chinese government to keep targeting Uyghurs.





Since 2017, the Chinese government has been building these increasingly large compounds in East Turkestan (Xinjiang). China’s internment camps are surrounded by high walls with razor wire, and their main aim is to erase the detainee’s ethnic and religious identity.



The Chinese government has tried to keep these camps a secret, just like every other troubling issues of governance in China; however, they recently had to admit the existence of such camps. They were pressured by multiple governments and institutions, after satellite imagery showed changes in landscape, for instance, in one area empty a couple of years ago, a facility covering 5.6 million square feet was established. Until this moment, news networks and human rights organizations across the globe are not capable of determining the number of prisoners in China’s Concentration Camps.



How are Uyghurs treated in these camps?



Detainees are given lessons in laws and loyalty to the state. For long hours, they are required to chant “There is no such thing as religion”, “All hail the Chinese state”, “All hail the Chinese President Xi Jinping”, “Long live Xi Jinping”, “Lenience for those who repent and punishment for those who resist”.



Anyone who could not memorize a book of slogans and rules within 14 days would be denied food or beaten. Those who complained about the indoctrination were reportedly tortured through waterboarding, starvation and electric shocks. Snakes are being used for interrogation, detainees may also get their nails or teeth pulled out, get forced into restraint devices and stress positions for hours, beaten until they are dead, or even sterilized; making these Nazi style concentration camps a typical attempt of genocide.




There are no verdicts and no sentences, the number of detainees remains unknown and the release of any of them entirely depends on a decision to be made by the Chinese government’s officials. According to some of the former detainees, the sole purpose of these camps is to strip Muslims of their religious identity, and their only crime was being Muslims, however, other camp survivors confirm that their ethnicities were also considered crimes; Uyghurs, Tibbets and Kazakhs are currently among the main targets of the Chinese government.



The Chinese government keeps insisting that these “reeducation centers” are only a tool to prevent extremism in a region it considers vulnerable. Former detainees on the other hand reported that they were being forced to sing the anthems of the Chinese Communist Party, forced to repeat slogans about the greatness of president Xi Jinping, while describing what a great place China is to live in, they were also ordered to disavow Islam, and other brainwashing activities that are aimed at affiliating people with the Chinese state and nothing else, disorienting them from their own ethnicities and religion(s).



How does the Chinese government define extremism?



China’s government claims to be combatting extremism, so what do they mean by extremism? And who can be considered an extremist?
Those who avoid alcohol, don’t smoke, wear hijab, have a long beard, go to Friday prayers, recite the funeral prayer and greet each other by saying Al-Salam Aleekom (meaning peace be upon you) are categorized as extremists.




Citizens are obliged to fill an application, which includes questions such as, are you a Uyghur? Do you have a job? Do you have a passport? Do you pray? Answers to these questions were turned into a scoring system, in order to categorize people, into “Safe”, “Regular”, and “Unsafe” people.



Even before creating the Nazi style concentration camps, religion has been received by the state as a mental illness that had to be corrected. Government officials keep claiming that their treatment of people inside the “reeducation centers” is humane, justified and legal.



Over the years, the Chinese government has been destroying churches and mosques, while forcing some Priests to replace the holy images in some churches with the picture of the Chinese President Xi Jinping. According to multiple human rights activists and organizations, the Chinese government is aiming to erase religion (especially Islam), as well as ethnicity, especially when it comes to Uyghurs, Tibbets, and Kazakhs.




Resource Rich Occupied Territories

Chinese governments had their unique imperialistic approach in regard to the treatment of occupied countries and territories. The British Empire for instance used to let the annexed countries maintain the name of the country, while leaving cultures and ethnicities almost untouched and maintaining control over the resources, as well as the governments of these countries. The French governments used to have a similar approach of control, while attempting to embed the French culture within occupied territories, making it difficult for any movements of resistance to get rid of the French control.

The Chinese governments on the other hand has renamed occupied territories like East Turkestan; they aimed at getting them integrated within the Eco-Political system of the mainland, but this never meant that Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities would be getting the same treatment as the Hun Chinese. The ethnically Hun citizens would just get treated with the regular oppression of a dictatorship, when Uyghurs, Tibbets, and Kazakhs would always be treated as inferior citizens. For instance, Uyghur girls are reportedly being forced to marry Hun Chinese men, as a part of the state’s plan to erase the Uyghurs’ ethnic identity.




Uyghurs have long held economic grievances with the state, for instance, when it comes to job distribution, most jobs are dedicated to the majority ethnically Han Chinese. East Turkestan, just like Tibet is treated as a resource rich occupied territory. Inside Tibet, the situation has been ridiculously dire since 2008; citizens have been heavily scrutinized, and more than 150 Tibetans have set themselves on fire to protest the lack of freedom of speech, freedom of movement and freedom of religion.


Surveillance in the Digital Dictatorship of China


Technology is at the core of the Chinese government’s digital dictatorship, and the government has built an especially advanced police state in Xinjiang.


In every 100 meters or so you can see a police station implanted in Xinjiang, aided with enormous amounts of CCTV cameras, with facial recognition technology; in order to enable the state’s totalitarian control over the region’s residents. With this kind of technology, they are most probably capable of counting each citizen’s breaths.

The locals can rarely have a chance to communicate their fears to foreign reporters (who rarely visit the province and try to investigate the issue); armed guards and surveillance cameras are spread all over the region, when Chinese flags are enforced on roof tops of several buildings, including the dimes of the mosques.

The Chinese government is moving forward to apply a “Social Score” system in which almost every instance of a citizen’s life is recorded, and the score is calculated accordingly. Low Social Scores may mean imposing restrictions on citizens in terms of travel, banking services, transportation, employment… or may even mean detainment.

Miserable enough for the majority of the Chinese citizens, this system involves an enormous burden on ethnic minorities in China. If you are a Hun Chinese, you are deemed trustworthy and granted freedom of movement (as long as you do not oppose the state or have trouble meeting any of your social, legal or financial obligations), if you are a Uyghur, you start with an average score, with restrictions imposed on travel and religious practices. If you are a Uyghur male who breaks any restrictions, you are marked as untrustworthy and detained in what the Chinese Communist Party calls “Education and Training Centers”.
Part of the surveillance effort is to collect bio metric data such as iris scans, finger prints, voice scans, and DNA. According to the Chinese authorities, 36 million people in Xinjiang took part in a program called “Physicals for all” between 2016 and 2017.
To improve their DNA tracking and testing capabilities, China’s Police purchased genetic sequencing equipment, and worldwide genetic data to compare them with the Uyghurs’ genetic information. The comprehensive DNA database, and the biometric data possessed by the Chinese government can be used to chase down Uyghurs who resist conforming to the campaign.
Uyghurs Abroad

Uyghurs abroad are deadly worried about their relatives in China, a Uyghur in Xinjiang can simply be deemed dangerous to China’s security if they contact people abroad.
Uyghurs living in the United States, Europe and other places around the world are also targeted by the Chinese government. They are deemed are unpatriotic by nature, they are typically threatened that their family members in China would be held in custody if they choose to speak out against the government’s oppression, or even that the Chinese officials would figure out ways to get them back to China to pay back for condemning such practices.
Some of the Uyghurs, Tibbets and Kazakhs who currently live out of the Chinese borders have been defying the odds, and speaking out against the Chinese government’s oppression. They have been promoting their cause by communicating with organizations such as Amnesty International, raising awareness on social media with campaigns like #MeTooUyghur and #SaveUyghur while hoping that international pressure might force the Chinese government to change its policies.

How is the World Reacting?
More efforts are highly needed, but China is already facing International Condemnation for its mass detainment of ethnic Uyghurs, and its crackdown on Tibetans and people of various faiths:

  • ·         The Swedish government has granted refugee status to China’s Uyghur Muslims.
  • ·         Republicans and Democrats in the United States condemned the Chinese government’s treatment of the situation, without using diplomatic or economic tools to enforce changes, but the trade war might still be picking up momentum.
  • ·         The Turkish government also condemned the crackdown on Uyghur Muslims in China, but did not actually do anything beyond the official statement of condemnation; diplomatic ties and trade agreements with the Chinese government are still steady.


Why are the majority of governments still silent about it?

Mega projects and investments, including “The Belt and Road” initiative have enabled the Chinese government to buy the silence of multiple states, especially that the execution of this precise initiative would leave dozens of countries in debt to China for the investment.

The Belt and Road initiative is actually the biggest planned project for the Chinese government and the biggest infrastructure project in the whole world; aimed to connect three continents together, and Xinjiang is right at the hub of this infrastructure development plan. If Xinjiang (East Turkestan) is not stable, the Chinese government’s entire foreign policy initiative might be undermined.

As a major player in today’s world economy, and the initiator of the project, the Chinese government is put in a situation in which it can hold other governments liable for any sort of instability within their borders if it may negatively influence the flow of goods, this means that it cannot tolerate instability within its own borders. China’s government must lead by example in terms of stabilization, and the only way they know how to do it is through ethnic cleansing, building on their heritage of state oppression and killing the rights of individuals as well as groups to think or even look different from the rest of the Chinese citizens.

States of Muslim majority countries have mostly remained silent about the Chinese government’s treatment of Uyghur Muslims:

  • ·        According to Mohamed Ben Salman of Saudi Arabia, “China has the right to carry out anti-terrorism and de-extremisation work for its national security”.
  • ·        Sisi, the Egyptian President has always maintained an almost identical position to that of the Saudi government on most issues, however, he did not even comment on the Uyghur issue.
  • ·        Imran Khan, the Prime Minister of Pakistan was asked in an interview if he would speak out against what is happening in China, and he simply responded “If I had enough knowledge, I would speak about it; it is not so much in the papers”.

China’s President, Xi Jinping and his communist party are likely to keep dismissing any criticism from foreign activists or governments as some sort of meddling in China’s internal affairs, while relying on oppression along with a bubble of Nationalism to silence critics within the country. Other governments will keep relying on similar Nationalistic bubbles; while encouraging their citizens to only care about the interests of their own country, unless we move as human beings against all types of injustice, including that in China.

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