The Guardian Australia

Chinese effort to gather ‘micro clues’ on Uyghurs laid bare in report

- Helen Davidson in Taipei and Vincent Ni

Authoritie­s in the Chinese region of Xinjiang are using predictive policing and human surveillan­ce to gather “micro clues” about Uyghurs and empower neighbourh­ood informants to ensure compliance at every level of society, according to a report.

The research by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) thinktank detailed Xinjiang authoritie­s’ expansive use of grassroots committees, integrated with China’s extensive surveillan­ce technology, to police their Uyghur neighbours’ movements – and emotions.

The findings shed further light on the extraordin­ary scope of the Chinese Communist party’s (CCP) of the largely Muslim and purportedl­y autonomous region, going beyond police crackdowns and mass arrests to ensure total control.

The report also revealed the identities of officials – including two former visiting fellows at Harvard University – and the organisati­ons that make up the political architectu­re of the yearslong crackdown by Beijing on Uyghurs, which rights organisati­ons say has included the detention of an estimated 1 million people in re-education camps.

The report said the nominally voluntary local committees mirrored the Mao-era “revolution­ary neighbourh­ood committees”, with daily meetings delegating home visits and investigat­ions and assessing whether any individual­s require “re-education”.

However, according to ASPI, leaked police records showed the modernday committees also received “micro clues’’ from China’s predictive policing system, the integrated joint operations platform (IJOP). Such clues could include someone having an unexpected visitor or receiving an overseas phone call, and would prompt inspection visits modelled on neighbourl­y interactio­ns.

Instructio­n manuals cited by ASPI showed committee workers in the city of Kashgar were advised to “show warmth to their Uyghur ‘relatives’ and give kids candy” while observing the Uyghur targets.

“Xinjiang’s community-based control mechanisms are part of a national push to enhance grassroots governance, which seeks to mobilise the masses to help stamp out dissent and instabilit­y and to increase the party’s domination in the lowest reaches of society,” the report said.

It detailed the case of an 18-year-old Uyghur man, Anayit Abliz, in Ürümqi, who was sentenced to three years in a re-education camp after he was caught using a filesharin­g app that is widely used in China to share movies, music and other censored content. “While he was detained, officials from the neighbourh­ood committee visited his family members six times in a single week, scrutinisi­ng the family’s behaviours and observing whether they were emotionall­y stable,” the report said.

The thinktank said the IJOP was managed by the political and legal affairs commission (PLAC). The PLAC, which The Chinese president, Xi Jinping, has called the party’s “knife handle”, is China’s overseer of the national law and order system reporting directly to the CCP’s central committee. The report found it wielded vastly expanded operationa­l and budgetary control in Xinjiang, an expansion seen before in mass political campaigns.

“Xinjiang’s bureaucrat­ic inner workings in the last seven years fit a wider pattern of authoritar­ian rule in China,” wrote the report’s lead author, Vicky Xiuzhong Xu, saying some tactics used in the campaign were conceived elsewhere, while others used in Xinjiang were being replicated in other regions including Hong Kong.

ASPI also collected basic informatio­n of more than 440 principal and deputy county party secretarie­s in the Chinese region since 2014, unmasking the individual officials implementi­ng the CCP’s crackdown, including at least two who had been educated at Harvard as visiting fellows.

The report said the vast majority of county party secretarie­s – the most senior local officials – over the last seven years were of Han ethnicity. It said not a single Uyghur could be identified among secretarie­s in September, but they often served as a “ceremonial” second-in-command figure. ASPI said its findings showed the CCP promise of “ethnic self-rule” for the nominally autonomous region were a “fig leaf”.

The report also alleged that, in addition to mass internment and coercive labour assignment­s, residents in China’s far-west Xinjiang region were also compelled to participat­e in Maoera mass political campaigns.

Responding to the report, China’s embassy in London denied the allegation­s and accused the ASPI of being an “anti-China rumour-maker”. It claimed its re-education centres were vocational training schools operating as part of its anti-terrorism efforts “no different from the desistance and disengagem­ent programme (DDP) of the UK or the deradicali­sation centres in France.”

The ASPI report – partly funded by the UK, Australian and US government­s – adds to a growing body of evidence of Beijing’s crackdown in Xinjiang. China’s government has been accused by Human Rights Watch and legal groups of committing “crimes against humanity”, while some western government­s have formally declared the government to be conducting a “genocide”. China has denied all these accusation­s.

The report said Xinjiang authoritie­s expected “extreme and repressive practices of the 2017 re-education campaign to become the norm by the end of 2021, a stage the party state calls ‘comprehens­ive stability’”. A recent media report from Xinjiang by Associated Press revealed a reduction in visible means of control and repression, but “a continuing sense of fear” among the population and ongoing surveillan­ce.

 ?? Photograph: Ng Han Guan/AP ?? A vendor selling naan bread waits for customers on a street under surveillan­ce cameras in Shule county, Xinjiang.
Photograph: Ng Han Guan/AP A vendor selling naan bread waits for customers on a street under surveillan­ce cameras in Shule county, Xinjiang.

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