Beijing's Cultural Genocide of Uyghurs
Congress makes the following findings: (1) The Government of the People's Republic of China has a long history of repressing Turkic Muslims, particularly Uighurs, in China's Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region. (2) In May 2014, Chinese authorities launched their latest ``Strike Hard against Violent Extremism'' campaign, using wide- scale, internationally-linked threats of terrorism as a pretext to justify pervasive restrictions on and human rights violations of members of the ethnic minority communities of the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region. The August 2016 transfer of former Tibet Autonomous Region Party Secretary Chen Quanguo to become the Xinjiang Party Secretary prompted an acceleration in the crackdown across the region. Scholars, human rights organizations, journalists, and think tanks have provided ample evidence substantiating the establishment by Chinese authorities of ``reeducation'' camps. Since 2014, Chinese authorities have detained no less than 800,000 Uighurs, ethnic Kazakhs, Kyrgyz, and other ethnic minorities in these camps. (3) Those detained in such facilities have described forced political indoctrination, torture, beatings, and food deprivation, as well as denial of religious, cultural, and linguistic freedoms, and confirmed that they were told by guards that the only way to secure release was to demonstrate sufficient political loyalty. Poor conditions and lack of medical treatment at such facilities appear to have contributed to the deaths of some detainees, including the elderly and infirm. (4) Uighurs and ethnic Kazakhs, who have now obtained permanent residence or citizenship in other countries, attest to receiving threats and harassment from Chinese officials. At least five journalists for Radio Free Asia's Uighur service have publicly detailed abuses their family members in Xinjiang have endured in response to their work exposing abusive policies across the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region. (5) In September 2018, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Michele Bachelet noted in her first speech as High Commissioner the ``deeply disturbing allegations of large-scale arbitrary detentions of Uighurs and other Muslim communities, in so-called re-education camps across Xinjiang''. (6) The Government of the People's Republic of China's actions against Turkic Muslims in the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, whose population was approximately 13 million at the time of the last Chinese census in 2010, are in contravention of international human rights laws, the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, and the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, both of which China has signed and ratified, and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which China has signed. Congress Gov
China says the camps are a necessary measure against terrorism following separatist violence in Xinjiang Getty Images
"[The ultimate goal is to thoroughly purge Xinjiang of all inkling of distinct identity and] identify with the country, such that, in the future, the idea of Uyghur will be in name only, but without its meaning."Uyghur economist Ilham Tohti in self-exile
The New York Times
accessed and published Chinese internal government documents that
revealed a situation that confronts Uyghurs should they enquire about
relatives who have been spirited away by authorities for 're-education'
purposes, when they are advised in response to "treasure
this chance for free education that the party and government has
provided to thoroughly eradicate erroneous thinking, and also learn
Chinese and job skills". Denying the Yughurs their language, their culture, their history, their religion.
The
Beijing Chinese Communist Party loves to demonstrate to the world how
proficient they are in rising to special occasions. As for example, the
speed and efficiency they are able to muster during a time of SARS-CoV-2
causing the pandemic of COVID-19, by building in the blink of an eye
hospital facilities to care for thousands upon thousands of people in
China's great populous megapolises. They tend not, however, to focus
publicly on their impressive capacity to build huge, sprawling campuses
for 're-education', complete with guard towers, fences and razor wire.
The
Chinese 'province' of Xinjiang is Muslim-dense, its ethnic and cultural
origins reflective of neighbouring Uzbekistan. The region suffered a
conquest by the Qing Dynasty in the 1870s -- even back then China was
resolute in its determination to expand its territory by swallowing
those of its neighbours to enable it to announce to the world that an
unwilling, conquest-battered territory (such as Tibet) is
henceforth to be recognized as Chinese. In like vein, the People's
Republic of China's military aspires to fulfill its function of wresting
disputed territory in the Himalaya from India.
Still from video: blindfolded, head-shaven Yughur men awaiting transport by train to re-education destination |
The
vast network of 're-education centres' in China's northwest keeps
growing in China's hegemonic outreach; the purpose, to pacify and
integrate an ethnic culture foreign to and hostile to Chinese
occupation. For its part, the CCP looks on the Xianjing-native Uyghurs
as 'splittists' -- a nasty pejorative for people who yearn for freedom
from oppression -- and is determined to create a spirit of 'harmony'
through re-education; which is to say after breaking a people's
collective spirit.
An
estimated one, and as much as two million people in the region have
been involuntarily incarcerated in the re-education facilities, mostly
ethnic Turkic Uyghurs, to cure them of "crimes" charactrerized as such
for attending Mosque or texting a relative in Turkey. For its part, the
Turkey of Recep Tayyip Erdogan makes no mention of the plight of the
Uyghurs, evidently unperturbed by human rights abuses they suffer under
Chinese occupation. Erdogan focuses instead on Israel, accusing it of
human rights abuses against Palestinians among whom close to two million
are citizens of Israel with equal rights.
Beijing
uses the classification of "boarding schools" or "vocational training
schools" when referencing the centres, for anodyne public consumption --
guard towers, high walls topped with razor wire notwithstanding. A
video that had been leaked out of China in 2019 features large groups of
blindfolded, shaven Uyghurs forced to kneel on the ground, awaiting
processing at a train station in Xinjiang, presumably headed for a
boarding school.
The
Australian Strategic Policy Institute with the use of satellite imagery
assembled 3D models of close to 400 Uyghyur detention facilities
located in Xinjiang. Local government construction tenders were analyzed
in 2018 by Reuters,
confirming the facilities to have been designed as fully equipped
prisons with surveillance and security systems, when according to
official Chinese designation-descriptions they are vocational training
schools. Clearly, western intelligence cannot tell the difference
between prisons and educational establishments.
Former
detainees describe being subjected to brutal regimens of indoctrination
replete with torture and sexual abuse for good measure, for those who
stubbornly dissent from China's well-intentioned interventions on the
way to creating good citizens. Ample evidence has also surfaced that
Uyghurs are forcefully used as slave labourers in Chinese factories.
Some of those factories produce goods sold by brand-name international
corporations relying on China for its cheap labour.
Twice
the region attempted in the 1930s and 1940s -- taking advantage of
political instability -- to beak away as an Islamic republic. This had
most recently been attempted in 1991 on the collapse of the Soviet
Union. Since then incidents of ethnic riots in Xinjiang and separatist
Uyghur violence emerged that drew Beijing under President Xi Jinping to
once-and-for-all solve the problem of troublesome Uyghurs with the
launch of the Strike Hard Campaign against Violent Terrorism.
The
entire population of Xinjiang between 2016 and 2017 was required to
hand over biometric data like DNA samples and iris scans under the
rubric of Physicals for All. And this, after residents were made to
surrender their passports, while police checkpoints popped up in their
cities. According to Chinese authorities, the Uyghur culture and Islamic
faith is but a mental illness, or an "ideological virus". And if any
nation knows about viruses, it is China.
Uyghur women were "no longer babymaking machines", having been liberated from that tiresome task by the thoughtful measures taken by Beijing to sterilize them and thus "eradicating exttremism",
according to China's embassy in the United States. In interviews with
Han Chinese residents n Dabancheng city, Xinjiang, investigators from
the BBC asked their opinion of the presence of new high-security
"re-education" centres in their midst. One man succinctly responded they
were purposed for the tens of thousands of Xinjiang residents known to
have "problems with their thoughts".
Once detainees "study well and their mental state is healthy, they will be able to live happily in society",
explained a counsellor from one of the facilities. China's Xinjiang
crackdown employs a wave of forced sterilization, birth control and
abortion, revealed an AP
investigation last year. Hugely successful as a control mechanism,
since the birthrate is in free fall; population in some regions falling
by over 80 percent.
Labels: People's Republic of China, Re-educaion, Splitists, Uyghurs, Xinjiang
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