The Standard (St. Catharines)

China poised for mass DNA collection

- MATTHEW BROWN

BEIJING — China appears to be laying the groundwork for the mass collection of DNA samples from residents of a restive, largely Muslim region that has been under a security crackdown, rights observers and independen­t experts said Tuesday.

Police in western China’s Xinjiang region confirmed that they are in the process of purchasing at least $8.7 million in equipment to analyze DNA samples.

Observers from Human Rights Watch said they’ve seen evidence of almost $3 million in additional purchases related to DNA testing. They warned such a collection program could be used as a way for authoritie­s to beef up their political control.

The move comes after Chinese authoritie­s last year reportedly required Xinjiang residents to submit DNA samples, fingerprin­ts and voice records to obtain passports or travel abroad.

Xinjiang borders several unstable Central Asian countries, including Afghanista­n. It has experience­d numerous bombings and vehicle and knife attacks blamed on ethnic separatist­s from the native Uighur Islamic minority. In one of the most recent attacks, eight people, including three assailants, were killed in a February knife attack in southern Xinjiang ’s Pishan County, which borders Pakistan.

Chinese authoritie­s seeking to counter religious extremism among the Uighurs have taken increasing­ly aggressive steps to quell the unrest. Those have included mandatory satellite tracking systems for vehicles in some areas, rewards for terror-related tips and prohibitio­ns against women wearing veils and men growing beards.

If used at full capacity, the new equipment could be used to profile up to 10,000 DNA samples a day and several million a year, said Yves Moreau, a computatio­nal biologist specializi­ng in genome analysis and DNA privacy at the University of Leuven in Belgium.

The scale of the purchases raises “a legitimate concern that Chinese authoritie­s could be planning to DNA profile a large fraction, or even all” of the Uighur people in Xinjiang, Moreau said.

Since it started collecting DNA profiles in 1989, China has amassed the unique genetic informatio­n on more than 40 million people, constituti­ng the world’s largest DNA database, according to a study last year by forensic researcher­s at the China Ministry of Public Security.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Uighurs rest near a food stall in Kashgar in China’s western Xinjiang province. Human Rights Watch said Tuesday that China appears to be laying the groundwork for the mass collection of DNA samples from residents in the restive region.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Uighurs rest near a food stall in Kashgar in China’s western Xinjiang province. Human Rights Watch said Tuesday that China appears to be laying the groundwork for the mass collection of DNA samples from residents in the restive region.

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