China yesterday defended its vast network of “re-education” camps in Xinjiang and said it would continue “training” residents, following Chinese government document leaks detailing surveillance and control of the region’s Uighur population.
Rights groups estimate more than 1 million Uighurs and other mostly Muslim minorities are held in the facilities, which reports describe as indoctrination camps that are run like prisons and aimed at eradicating Uighur culture and religion.
The government has launched a propaganda drive in recent days to justify its security crackdown after the leaks emerged and the US House of Representatives passed a bill calling for sanctions against officials involved in the policy.
At a news conference, Shohrat Zakir, chairman of the far-west region, rejected the estimates by rights groups and foreign experts of the camps’ population.
He did not provide a figure for the number of people housed in what the government describes as “vocational education centers.”
“Students ... with the help of the government have realized stable employment [and] improved their quality of life,” Zakir said.
Currently, those in the centers have “all completed their courses,” he said, adding that “there are people entering and exiting.”
In addition to the centers, the Xinjiang government’s next step is to “proceed with daily, routine, normal and open educational training to village cadres, rural party members, farmers, herdsmen, and unemployed graduates of middle school and high school,” he said, without elaborating.
Last month, the New York Times obtained 403 documents on Beijing’s crackdown on mostly Muslim ethnic minorities in the region, including unpublished speeches by Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平), who urged officials to show “absolutely no mercy” against extremists.
A separate leak of government documents by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) showed how local officials were ordered to monitor camp detainees and prevent their escape.
After initially denying the existence of the camps, Beijing acknowledged it had opened “vocational education centers” in Xinjiang aimed at preventing extremism by teaching Mandarin and job skills.
Rights groups and foreign media have reported that official documents and satellite images show the facilities are equipped and run like prisons.
Yesterday, Xu Hairong (徐海榮), party secretary of Xinjiang’s capital, Urumqi, criticized the New York Times and ICIJ document leaks, accusing them of “maliciously distorting and slandering” the region’s camps and “counterterrorism, de-radicalization work.”
Zakir also denounced the US Uighur rights bill as a “blatant act of hegemony.”
“All ethnic groups of Xinjiang express strong condemnation and resolute opposition to this,” he said.
Chinese state media have ramped up a defense of government policies in Xinjiang, posting on Twitter graphic videos with English subtitles of deadly attacks in the region.
At the news conference, officials disseminated copies of a state television documentary on fighting terrorism in the region.
Footage of attacks were also shown, including a mass-stabbing in 2014 at Kunming Railway Station in Yunnan Province, where knife-wielding assailants killed 31 people and injured more than 130 others.
Xinjiang is a “land of harmony and stability where people of different ethnic groups live and work in peace,” a male voice said in English while a very different promotional video played before the press event.
Shots of dancing and waving ethnic minorities flashed by, as well aerial views of wind farms, railway lines and verdant farmland.
“Different ethnic groups ... remain firmly united like the seeds of a pomegranate,” the narrator read, as the video showed scenes of smiling and laughing Uighurs.
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