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China is detaining Uighur Muslims simply for being under 40 years old, leaked documents show
Bill Bostock
Dec 9, 2020, 6:09 AM
A man walking past a screen showing images of China's President Xi Jinping in Kashgar, Xinjiang region, in June 2019. GREG BAKER/AFP via Getty Images
On Wednesday, Human Rights Watch published details of a dataset showing the reasons why approximately 2,000 people were detained in Aksu prefecture, Xinjiang, between mid-2016 and late 2018.
Human Rights Watch said that the list appears to come from a part of Aksu that is mostly Uighur, and the group said it is confident that all the people on the list are Uighurs.
Justifications used by officials on the Aksu list to detain the Uighurs included "switching off their phone repeatedly," "generally acting suspiciously," and being "born after the 1980s.
One person on the list, identified as Ms. T, was detained for "links to sensitive countries" after she received four calls from a foreign number in March 2017, Human Rights Watch said.
Officials in Xinjiang have previously used obscure and ridiculous justifications to detain and imprison Uighurs, including setting clocks to a different time zone than Beijing's, which China deems an act of rebellion.
The Aksu list, which was passed to Human Rights Watch by Radio Free Asia's Uyghur Service in August 2020, "provides further insights into how China's brutal repression of Xinjiang's Turkic Muslims is being turbocharged by technology," said Maya Wang, senior China researcher at Human Rights Watch.
"The Chinese government owes answers to the families of those on the list: why were they detained, and where are they now?"
A view of a new suspected tier-four detainment camp in Kashgar, Xinjiang, China Google Earth
The people on the list comprise a small segment of some millions of Uighurs who have been detained in prison-like camps since 2016.
Bill Bostock
Dec 9, 2020, 6:09 AM
- Human Rights Watch obtained a leaked Chinese government list of 2,000 Uighur Muslims detained between 2016 and late 2018 in Aksu, Xinjiang.
- Uighurs on that list were detained for reasons including "switching off their phone repeatedly," "generally acting suspiciously," and being "born after the 1980s," Human Rights Watch said.
- The Aksu used data from the Integrated Joint Operations Platform, China's mass surveillance system that builds profiles of all Xinjiang residents.
- Since 2016, China has detained at least one million Uighurs in hundreds of prison camps, which the country euphemistically calls "reeducation centers."
On Wednesday, Human Rights Watch published details of a dataset showing the reasons why approximately 2,000 people were detained in Aksu prefecture, Xinjiang, between mid-2016 and late 2018.
Human Rights Watch said that the list appears to come from a part of Aksu that is mostly Uighur, and the group said it is confident that all the people on the list are Uighurs.
Justifications used by officials on the Aksu list to detain the Uighurs included "switching off their phone repeatedly," "generally acting suspiciously," and being "born after the 1980s.
One person on the list, identified as Ms. T, was detained for "links to sensitive countries" after she received four calls from a foreign number in March 2017, Human Rights Watch said.
Officials in Xinjiang have previously used obscure and ridiculous justifications to detain and imprison Uighurs, including setting clocks to a different time zone than Beijing's, which China deems an act of rebellion.
The Aksu list, which was passed to Human Rights Watch by Radio Free Asia's Uyghur Service in August 2020, "provides further insights into how China's brutal repression of Xinjiang's Turkic Muslims is being turbocharged by technology," said Maya Wang, senior China researcher at Human Rights Watch.
"The Chinese government owes answers to the families of those on the list: why were they detained, and where are they now?"
The people on the list comprise a small segment of some millions of Uighurs who have been detained in prison-like camps since 2016.
China is detaining Uighur Muslims simply for being under 40 years old, leaked documents show
Officials in Xinjiang, China, built a database of residents that includes security footage, internet history, facial recognition, and family details.
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