Uyghurs staring at specter of genocide

One of the worst cases of inhumanity in recent history is now occurring in China’s Xinjiang

Video by Videvo

Video by Videvo

There is little doubt that the Uyghur people and other Turkic Muslims of the Xinjiang region of northwestern China are facing genocide.

The Uyghur population numbers some 13.5 million people in Xinjiang, a region the size of Iran, an area that represents more than 16 percent of China’s landmass, with a wealth of oil, natural gas, gold and cotton to boot.

After a brief flirtation with independence in the 1930s and 1940s, the Uyghurs of Xinjiang (who prefer the name East Turkestan), folded back into modern China after the communists took power in 1949.

Uyghurs are a Turkic-speaking people who predominantly practice Sunni Islam, with a culture and customs far removed from the majority Han, the ethnic group that predominates China.

A Uyghur woman in Kashgar

A Uyghur woman in Kashgar, Xinjiang region, Sept. 15, 2019. (Photo by Sirio Carnevalino/ shutterstock.com)

A Uyghur woman in Kashgar, Xinjiang region, Sept. 15, 2019. (Photo by Sirio Carnevalino/ shutterstock.com)

A Han Chinese woman riding a scooter and a Uyghur man sitting in a sidewalk

A Han Chinese woman riding a scooter and a Uyghur man sitting in a sidewalk, in the city of Turpan, Xinjiang region, Aug. 10, 2012. (Photo by Peek Creative Collective/shutterstock.com)

A Han Chinese woman riding a scooter and a Uyghur man sitting in a sidewalk, in the city of Turpan, Xinjiang region, Aug. 10, 2012. (Photo by Peek Creative Collective/shutterstock.com)

Bit by bit, Beijing also chipped away at religious freedoms to slowly guide this assimilation into its socialist ideal, and sure enough unrest grew.

During the 1990s and prior to the 2008 Beijing Olympics there were street protests held by Uyghurs. Things escalated in 2009, when Uyghur versus Han clashes in the regional capital, Urumqi, killed about 200 people according to official figures which haven’t been independently verified.

Security personnel in riot gear man their position in front of People's Square while on patrol in Urumqi

Security personnel in riot gear man their position in front of People's Square while on patrol in Urumqi on July 17, 2009 in northwest China's Xinjiang province. (Photo by Frederic J. Brown/AFP)

Security personnel in riot gear man their position in front of People's Square while on patrol in Urumqi on July 17, 2009 in northwest China's Xinjiang province. (Photo by Frederic J. Brown/AFP)

Reports followed of repeated acts of terrorism allegedly by Uyghur extremists that would lead to China’s President Xi Jinping saying no mercy was to be shown. Establishing what actually occurred during these reported terror incidents remains problematic, as foreign journalists have little access to Xinjiang or to those areas subjected to so-called attacks.

Given the nature of the reported terror attacks, it was not difficult for Xi and the Communist Party propaganda machine to paint the Uyghurs in the same light as Islamic State or similar terrorist groups.

Main photo: an Ethnic Uyghur man watches as an army truck full of Chinese soldiers patrols the street in Urumqi in China's far west Xinjiang province on July 8, 2009. (Photo by Peter Parks/AFP)

An Ethnic Uygur man watches as an army truck full of Chinese soldiers patrols the street in Urumqi in China's far west Xinjiang province on July 8, 2009. (Photo by Peter Parks/AFP)
A pedestrian walks past anti-terror propaganda posters pasted along the streets of Urumqi,

A pedestrian walks past anti-terror propaganda posters pasted along the streets of Urumqi, farwest China's Xinjiang region on Sept. 16, 2014. (Photo by Goh Chai Hin/AFP)

A pedestrian walks past anti-terror propaganda posters pasted along the streets of Urumqi, farwest China's Xinjiang region on Sept. 16, 2014. (Photo by Goh Chai Hin/AFP)

Since 2017, hundreds of internment camps have been set up across Xinjiang. Most are repurposed schools or government buildings, but their sinister nature cannot be underestimated.

The system — euphemistically called Vocation Skills Education Training Centers by the Chinese government — is rife with accusations of brainwashing and brutality.

Such is the extent of this network that accurate figures are hard to come by. However, leading independent researchers estimate that at least 1 million people are confined to these centers at any one time — a figure deduced from the government’s own budget for feeding inmates — with upwards of 3 million having already passed through the system.

The Chinese government insists the camps are voluntary and for the purpose of employment training but all evidence to the contrary, even from its own civil service.

The centers are reportedly financed through a security budget, far removed from education, are fenced and gated to keep inmates secure, and policed by specially trained guards using sophisticated surveillance equipment.

Recent videos posted on social media have even shown that inmates are handcuffed to their beds.

While there is a minimal application of skills training, prisoners are routinely subjected to brainwashing for hours at a time and similarly required to learn Chinese using methodology harking back to Mao Zedong’s infamous labor camps, which has evolved to become “transformation through education”, as the Chinese government puts it.

The application of re-education depends very much on the inmate’s perceived threat to the authorities, with those deemed more extreme subject to legal education, thought education, psychological counseling and behavioral correction.

Former inmates have alleged they were made to sing songs praising Xi or recant their faith before being allowed to eat and sometimes being forced to eat pork or drink alcohol, while there are numerous instances of women alleging they were forced to take medication or substances interfering with their menstrual cycle.

Main photo: a photo taken during a press tour organized by the Chinese government of Uyghurs supposedly learning gardening in a re-education camp — that the Chinese label as a vocational skills training center — in Moyu County, Hotan Prefecture in Xinjiang. (shutterstock.com photo)

A photo taken during a press tour organized by the Chinese government of Uyghurs supposedly learning gardening in a re-education camp — that the Chinese label as a vocational skills training center — in Moyu County, Hotan Prefecture in Xinjiang. (shutterstock.com photo)
Watchtowers on a high-security facility near what is believed to be a re-education camp where mostly Muslim ethnic minorities are detained

This photo taken on May 31, 2019 shows watchtowers on a high-security facility near what is believed to be a re-education camp where mostly Muslim ethnic minorities are detained, on the outskirts of Hotan, Xinjiang. (Photo by Greg Baker/AFP)

This photo taken on May 31, 2019 shows watchtowers on a high-security facility near what is believed to be a re-education camp where mostly Muslim ethnic minorities are detained, on the outskirts of Hotan, Xinjiang. (Photo by Greg Baker/AFP)

Meanwhile, human rights groups claim that inmates are forced to work in Xinjiang’s cotton industry, raising speculation that big names in global textile manufacturing and apparel have been profiting from Uyghur slave labor.

At the same time, some groups have alleged that Uyghurs have been forcibly moved within the national penal system to camps across the country, thus further diluting the population.

Moreover, further evidence is available of children becoming subject to re-education. As parents are picked up by the authorities and confined to the centers, so officials take their children to specialized schools or orphanages where they are similarly brainwashed to forget their culture and heritage.

There are nearly 500,000 children in these schools, according to current estimates.

As distressing as this appears so far, arguably the most menacing approach to the Uyghur is the ethnic cleansing outside camp walls.

A Uyghur woman waiting with children on a street in Kashgar

This photo taken on June 4, 2019 shows a Uyghur woman waiting with children on a street in Kashgar in China's northwest Xinjiang region. (Photo by Greg Baker/AFP)

This photo taken on June 4, 2019 shows a Uyghur woman waiting with children on a street in Kashgar in China's northwest Xinjiang region. (Photo by Greg Baker/AFP)

Adrian Zenz, an expert on the plight of Uyghurs and Tibetans, reports a program of mass sterilizations of up to 34 percent of married Uyghur women in the rural part of southern Xinjiang, which has been ongoing for two years.

Women are typically offered cash in return for the procedure but Zenz notes that those who refuse are interned, where — if eyewitness reports are accurate — they are sterilized regardless.

According to Zenz, in 2018, 80 percent of all intrusive birth prevention surgeries nationwide were performed in Xinjiang, despite the region accounting for less than 2 percent of the population, contributing to an already plummeting growth rate among the Uyghur population.

A woman walking in an ethnic Uyghur neighborhood in Aksu in the region of Xinjiang

This photo taken on Sept.11, 2019 shows a woman walking in an ethnic Uyghur neighborhood in Aksu in the region of Xinjiang. (Photo by Hector Retamal/AFP)

This photo taken on Sept.11, 2019 shows a woman walking in an ethnic Uyghur neighborhood in Aksu in the region of Xinjiang. (Photo by Hector Retamal/AFP)

The most disturbing aspect to the story is that Zenz’s research draws heavily from a wealth of official Chinese government documentation, which is quite freely available.

Ironically, he stated in some of his research that Uyghur counterclaims were often unreliable because they could not be verified, but the information from the Chinese government could easily be cross-checked by supporting documents within the civil service.

The Cambridge scholar mined data that was, and still is, in the public eye and in the process argued that one of the worst acts of genocide in human history was happening right under everyone’s nose.

It still is.


Gareth Corsi is a freelance journalist based in Malaysia. The views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial stance of LiCAS.news.


Published August 20, 2020

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A woman holds a sign as she takes part in an event in front of the Chinese embassy in Kuala Lumpur on July 5, 2019 in solidarity with the Uyghur community in China. (Photo by Mohd Rasfan/AFP)

A woman holds a sign as she takes part in an event in front of the Chinese embassy in Kuala Lumpur on July 5, 2019 in solidarity with the Uyghur community in China. (Photo by Mohd Rasfan/AFP)