Religion
Related: About this forumUyghur refugee tells of death and fear inside China's Xinjiang camps
From the article:
Tursun says she and her son are victims of Beijing's growing crackdown on Muslim majority Uyghurs in China's far western Xinjiang region, where a US State Department official says at least 800,000 and possibly up to two million people may have been detained in huge "re-education centers."....
Uyghurs have likened China's campaign against their people to a form of "cultural genocide," with former internment camp detainees describing forced lessons in Communist Party propaganda and region-wide bans on Uyghur culture and traditions.
China has repeatedly denied it is imprisoning or re-educating Uyghurs in Xinjiang, instead saying that it is undertaking voluntary vocational training as part of an anti-extremism program...
"All of us found that we have something wrong with ourselves and luckily enough the Communist Party and the government offer this kind of school to us for free," one Uyghur inmate told journalists during the tour.
To read more of this ongoing repression of a religious minority:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/uyghur-refugee-tells-of-death-and-fear-inside-chinas-xinjiang-camps/ar-BBSryYp?ocid=spartandhp
Some here have asked "what can we do", and the implication, or one implication, is that we should ignore it, or not post about it. But the first step toward solving a problem is admitting that it exists.
Major Nikon
(36,900 posts)Mariana
(15,131 posts)"What can we do?" is a question. You can tell it's a question because it has one of these at the end of it: ? The only thing "implied" when someone asks you a question is that the person asking the question would like an answer. That's what dialogue is, Gil, by definition.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/dialogue
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)was posited by one who asked why I was even posting these articles.
Jim__
(14,463 posts)Here's a little bit more about the situation, from the February 7th issue of The New York Review of Books:
...
The punitive nature of the new detention facilities springing up in the desert, ringed by high walls and barbed wire and flanked by guard towers and police boxes, became apparent from photos and reporting by the fall of 2017. Our best sense of what is happening inside the camps comes from former prisoners, one writing anonymously in Foreign Policy, and others interviewed in Kazakhstan by Shih and Emily Rauhala for The Washington Post: detainees must sing anthems of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), disavow Islam, criticize themselves and their familys beliefs, watch propaganda films, and study Chinese language and history. They are told that their culture is backward. Some must memorize the moralizing Three-character classic (San zi jing), a classical Chinese childrens primer in trisyllabic verse, abandoned as a pedagogical text elsewhere in China for over a century. Cells are crowded and food is poor. Those who complain reportedly risk solitary confinement, food deprivation, being forced to stand against a wall for extended periods, being shackled to a wall or bolted by wrists and ankles into a rigid tiger chair, and possibly waterboarding and electric shocks.
Shohrat Zakir, chairman of the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, said in an October 2018 interview with Xinhua that internees must learn Chinese,
gain modern science knowledge and enhance their understanding of Chinese history, culture and national conditions learn legal knowledge, including the content of the Constitution, Criminal Law and Xinjiangs Counter-extremism regulations, as well as acquire at least one vocational skill to suit local conditions and the job market.
Given this imposing curriculum, it is not surprising that we know of almost no one who has been released after being interned in the Xinjiang prison camps, and that we dont know what internees will face if and when they are let go. There is growing evidence from relatives accounts, satellite photos, and internal documents that following a course of indoctrination, internees are forced to work in factories in or near the camps.
Research by Adrian Zenz of the European School of Culture and Theology confirmed the frightening extent of the camps and provided an estimate of how many people are confined in them. Zenz has tracked the discussion of Xinjiang de-extremification and transformation through education in Chinese media and party journals for several years. He identified seventy-eight bids by contractors to build, expand, or upgrade internment camps; several of them were planned to exceed 100,000 square feet in area, and one was nearly 900,000 square feet. Documentary evidence for the rush of camp construction is corroborated by satellite photographs of the sitesmany first compiled from Google Earth as a remarkable personal project by Shawn Zhang, a law student at the University of British Columbia, and since confirmed and expanded by professional remote-imaging firms working with the BBC and other media. Another indication of the breadth of the internment comes from visitors to Xinjiang, who have commented on the shuttering of Uighur shops and a noticeable lack of people, especially Uighurs between fifteen and forty-five, on the streets.
Comparing data from leaked documents and statements by local officials with population data, Zenz and other researchers estimated that between several hundred thousand and over a million people are interned in the reeducation camps. In February 2018 a Uighur activist media outlet in Turkey released a document it says was leaked by a believable member of the security services on the ground in Xinjiang. The document, dating from late 2017 or early 2018, tabulates precise numbers of internees in county-level detention centers, amounting to 892,329 (it excluded municipal-level administrative units, notably the large cities of Urumqi, Khotan, and Yining). Though the documents provenance cannot be confirmed, if genuine it supports the estimates of a million or more total internees. (The US State Department estimates that between 800,000 and two million Xinjiang Muslims are interned in the camps.) These estimates do not include the rapidly increasing numbers of people in ordinary prisons: according to PRC government data, criminal arrests in Xinjiang increased by 200,000 between 2016 and 2017, and amounted to 21 percent of total arrests in China in 2017, even though Xinjiang has only 1.5 percent of Chinas population. It is believed that the PRC has so far locked up over 10 percent of the adult Muslim population of Xinjiang.
more ...
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)Educating them to become brave new modern citizens.
Their sin, is that they refuse to abandon their religion, language, and culture. In theory, the Chinese Constitution guarantees them these rights, but in practice, the totalitarian rulers are attempting to forcibly eliminate religion.