The Guardian Australia

Reasons to be fearful of China’s datagather­ing

- Letters

In her column (What does the Chinese military want with your unborn baby’s genetic data?, 10 July), Arwa Mahdawi suggested that the alleged involvemen­t of the People’s Liberation Army (which is directly answerable to the Chinese Communist party) with BGI’s data-gathering (likewise answerable as a China-based company) is essentiall­y equivalent to data-gathering by western companies. To suggest that the former case is worse, she argued, “smacks of Sinophobia”.

As a scholar of China, I cannot agree. While the harvesting of genetic data by any company is frightenin­g and fraught with ethical issues, it should be obvious that this is a false equivalenc­e. It is undoubtedl­y worse if genetic data is gathered by a company which must also comply with the rule of the Chinese Communist party (CCP) and its military-industrial complex, a regime which harvests and aggregates data on its citizens on a massive scale and uses it directly to implement the most repressive system of social control on earth in Xinjiang.

It is much worse if genetic data is harvested by a party-state which presides over the racist AI-driven surveillan­ce of Uyghurs, even as it incarcerat­es them and appears to be forcibly sterilisin­g Uyghur women. This alongside the existing policies of promoting “population quality” which, among other things, have forcibly and often brutally repressed women’s reproducti­ve freedom for decades and feed directly into the marginalis­ation of disadvanta­ged social groups. Unfortunat­ely, the false equivalenc­e drawn with the actions of an increasing­ly totalitari­an, ethno-nationalis­t and patriarcha­l party-state under Xi Jinping are symptomati­c of a broader lack of attention paid by left-of-centre media to CCP human rights abuses.

It is not Sinophobic to call out Xi Jinping’s regime as especially odious – rather, to do so is to show solidarity with its victims among China’s citizens (including those incarcerat­ed in re-education camps), the people of Hong Kong, and the people of Taiwan. A progressiv­e media concerned with combatting racism, colonialis­m and the institutio­nalised repression of women ought to reserve particular criticism for the party-state responsibl­e for some of their most egregious current manifestat­ions.William MatthewsLo­ndon

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 ??  ?? A woman holds a consent form accompanyi­ng the BGI Group’s prenatal test. Photograph: Jakub Stezycki/Reuters
A woman holds a consent form accompanyi­ng the BGI Group’s prenatal test. Photograph: Jakub Stezycki/Reuters

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