The United Nations has cited harrowing reports about Uighur detention centers in China. Photo: Twitter bit.ly/2PBPq1d
An undated file photo of Uighurs being held at a 'vocational training' center in Xinjiang, China. Photo: Twitter

In China’s far western region of Xinjiang, Chinese Communist Party officials are persecuting one of the worst human rights abuses of our time, what I labeled an act of cultural genocide on national television last week.

Pressure is mounting on the Australian government and others around the world to go beyond statements of concern and challenge China over its treatment of the Uighur minority, particularly those Australian citizens and permanent residents being held in the vast network of “re-education camps” in Xinjiang.

Two Australian Uighur men are meeting federal politicians in Canberra today to push for the government’s assistance in helping family members trapped in China.

Australia was one of 22 countries to sign a recent letter to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights expressing concern about the “arbitrary detention” of Uighurs, but otherwise, its response has been muted.

In recent days, the Chinese government has defended its actions with a dubious propaganda report claiming that Uighurs were historically forced to become Muslims and have been an integral part of China for thousands of years.

China repeatedly makes false and anachronistic claims like this about the ancient unity of the “Chinese people,” which includes ethnic minorities like the Uighurs. Its aim is to project modern notions of sovereignty, nationhood and fixed borders back through history.

Max Walden@maxwalden_

“It’s foolish to speak about the existence of a unified Chinese nation 5,000 or even 3,000 years ago to include what is today Xinjiang and the Uighur people,” @jleibold told @abcnews. Uighurs always an inseparable part of China, new white paper claims https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-07-22/china-report-says-xinjiangs-uyghurs-forced-to-convert-to-islam/11330490 

‘Bizarre, blatant distortion’: Beijing claims Uighurs were forced to convert to Islam

The Uyghur ethnic minority in Xinjiang were forced to become Muslim and have been an integral part of China for thousands of years, Beijing says in a new report.

abc.net.au

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In reality, the 11 million or so Uighurs are an indigenous Turkic-speaking people who have inhabited what they call “East Turkestan” for over a millennium. Along with the Tibetans, the Uighurs have born the brunt of China’s settler-colonial project, which seeks to assert its control over remote regions that are closer to Moscow and Tehran than Beijing.

Since March 2017, the Chinese government has interned over a million Uighurs and other Muslim minorities in massive, prison-like camps (including possibly 17 Australian residents), where they are subjected to coercive ideological remolding.

Detainees are forced to denounce their religion, forbidden to speak their language, and taught how to adopt the norms of China’s Han ethnic majority, while praising President Xi Jinping and the Communist Party for salvation.

In their own words, party officials are “washing brains” and “cleansing hearts” in order to “cure” those bewitched by extremist thoughts. In Xinjiang today, non-Han thoughts and behavior are pathologized as deviant and thus in need of urgent transformation.

What is genocide?

A litany of words and phrases have been used to describe this process. The Chinese government calls the camps free “vocational education and training centers” where Uighurs willingly learn Chinese language and employment skills in order to assist with their “rehabilitation and reintegration.”

Scholars, journalists and rights defenders have spoken about cultural and religious “persecution” in Xinjiang, arguing the party-state’s policies amount to mass ethnic cleansingcultural re-engineeringforced assimilationbrainwashing, or even ethnocide.

In August 2018, Gay McDougall, the vice-chair of UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, referred to Xinjiang as a “no rights zone.”

Yet, I believe the scale, sophistication and intent of China’s policies in Xinjiang merits a stronger description.

The term genocide was coined by lawyer Rafael Lemkin in 1944 in reaction to Nazi Germany’s coordinated strategy to annihilate the Jews, gypsies and other non-Aryan peoples. Four years later, the UN General Assembly adopted the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, with Australia one of the first counties to ratify it. The People’s Republic of China ratified it in 1983.

The convention defines genocide as: “acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group.”

It also obligates signatories to punish those who engage in genocidal acts through a “competent” domestic or international penal tribunal.

Whether genocide includes only physical acts or can extend to attacks on cultural heritage has elicited intense debate, but for Lemkin, the term includes: “drastic methods aimed at the rapid and complete disappearance of the culture, moral and religious life of a group of human beings.”

Genocide also requires specific intent. In the words of political scientists Kenneth J. Campbell, genocide is a “premeditated, calculated, systematic, malicious crime authorized by the state’s political leaders.”

This is exactly what Communist Party officials did when they authorized and then legalized the mass internment of Uighurs and other Muslim minorities in “concentrated transformation-through-education centers,” ripping more than 10% of the population away from their communities so they could be deliberately re-programmed.

Police watch as Uighur Muslims leave the Id Kah Mosque after morning prayers in the old town of Kashgar in China's Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region. Photo: AFP/Johannes Eisele
Police watch as Uighur Muslims leave the Id Kah Mosque after morning prayers in the old town of Kashgar in China’s Xinjiang. Photo: AFP/ Johannes Eisele

Various methods for erasing culture

Yet, facts arguably matter more than words when it comes to China’s policies in Xinjiang.

We now have ample evidence (including internal party documents) of the deliberate efforts to destroy Uighur culture and identity. Everyday actions like avoiding pork, speaking Uyghur, wearing a headscarf or praying quietly are now labeled “manifestations of religious extremism,” or what party officials call “malignant tumors” requiring urgent excising in a radical form of cultural surgery.

In the city of Kashgar, for example, a party document highlights the need to sever the lineages, roots and cultural connections of Uighurs in order to eliminate the fountainhead of potential extremism.

German researcher Adrian Zenz has uncovered evidence of the party’s efforts to separate Uighur children from their parents in state institutions, where they can be assimilated and indoctrinated by officials. In these institutions, cultural, religious, and linguistic knowledge is intentionally ruptured.


Read: Who are the Uighurs and why is the Chinese government detaining them?


In some parts of Xinjiang, mosques and shrines are being bulldozed, while others are transformed into empty sites guarded by facial recognition cameras and imams on the party payroll.

In the name of strengthening “bilingual education,” Chinese is now the language of instruction across Xinjiang, from preschool to university. The use of Uighur language, script, signs and pictures prohibited. Speaking Uighur is now considered unpatriotic and can get one sent off for re-education.

Perhaps most disturbing, inter-ethnic marriages are being actively promoted to slowly breed out Uighurness, with cash and other material inducements offered to Han men who take a Uighur bride.

One can find numerous videos and messages promoting Han-Uyghur inter-marriage on Chinese social media, asserting Xinjiang is now safe and home to many beautiful and eligible Uighur women who would appreciate a doting Han husband.

James Leibold@jleibold

The Sinophone internet is awash with short videos promoting Han-Uighur inter-marriage. This one asserts that Xinjiang has long been a mixed race region and is now safe and home to many beautiful and eligible Uighur women who will appreciate a doting Han husband

Embedded video

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Finally, the Chinese government has intensified its family planning regime in Xinjiang to slow the growth of the Uighur population and eliminate what party officials call “low-quality births.”

Beginning in 2017, the region adopted a uniform two children policy that nullified preferential rules allowing rural Uighur women to have additional births. In the past, Uighur women were given 3,000 RMB (roughly A$620) to forgo a third birth and agree to some sort of “long-term contraceptive measure.”

The Communist Party’s calculated war on Uyghur identity is quite literally tearing families and communities apart, while the rich tradition of diversity and tolerance in China is left in tatters.

The resilient nature of culture and memory means that attempts at genocide, thankfully, are rarely successful. Yet the pain they inflict is real.

This report appeared first on The Conversation. The original version can be seen here

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