New Internationalist

LIVING IN A GHOST WORLD

The Uyghurs are a Turkic-speaking, Muslim ethnic group who are native to Xinjiang, northwest China. In 2016, the Communist Party Secretary in Tibet, Chen Quanguo, was moved to the role of governor of Xinjiang, where he launched a mass persecution campaign against the Uyghurs, seemingly in response to a handful of terror attacks.

Amnesty International reports that up to a million Uyghurs have been through re-education camps, where many are forced to renounce Islam and sing nationalistic songs. In July 2019, the government claimed, without evidence, that most detainees from these camps had been released. Many of these ‘graduates’ have been transferred into a network of factories to perform forced labour. Outside the factories, a high-tech surveillance state ensures that Uyghur life is ruthlessly controlled.

Yohann Koshy: When did the mass detention – in what the government calls ‘vocational training centres’ – begin?

Darren Byler: The detention of a million people has happened over the last three years. The state decided that they were going to move from what they called a ‘hard-strike campaign’ against Uyghur ‘separatism, terrorism and extremism’ to a ‘re-education campaign’. They determined that around 10 per cent of the Uyghur population – the total population is around 12 million – were pre-terrorists or pre-criminals.

The Chinese authorities think of what they’re doing as something similar to what the UK calls Prevent, which is countering violent extremism before it happens. Beijing saw Uyghurs turning towards more pious forms of Islamic practice and was afraid that this would lead to violent struggle, although there was little evidence that this was necessarily the case or would happen. It decided pre-emptively that it would detain this number of people.

There had been violent incidents prior to this. In October

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from New Internationalist

New Internationalist2 min readGender Studies
Star Ratings
Uruguay stands out in Latin America for its relatively egalitarian society and high income per capita. Extreme poverty is almost non-existent. Its middle class is the largest on the continent and represents more than 60% of its population. The Covid-
New Internationalist2 min readHistory & Theory
Mick Lynch
by Gregor Gall (Manchester University Press, ISBN 9781526173096) manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk ‘You’ve gone off into the world of the surreal,’ Mick Lynch told Kay Burley live on Sky News. ‘Your questions are verging into nonsense.’ Since the start
New Internationalist1 min read
Seriously?
Politicians are not known for being gracious losers but few have thrown their toys out the pram quite like Uganda minister Evelyn Anite. In a move that would make the sorest of sore losers blush, Anite took back an ambulance she’d donated to her cons

Related