The Sunday Guardian

China targets the Islamic faith

- DEEPAK VOHRA NEW DELHI

China has destroyed mosques, burnt Qurans, forbidden fasting during Ramzan, and outlawed halal diets. China is committing crimes against humanity in its treatment of the Uyghur ethnic minority and other Turkic Muslims in Xinjiang.

As the Afghanista­n situation deteriorat­ed, China hosted the Taliban in July 2021, called them a “pivotal force” and begged them not to shelter Uyghur militants from Xinjiang province, Afghanista­n’s neighbour. China’s fear of radical Islam explains its outreach to the fundamenta­list Taliban. It is worried about the support, which Al Qaeda (that maintains close ties with the Taliban) could provide to the so-called East Turkestan Islamic Movement and the infiltrati­on of Islamic State (IS) fighters into Xinjiang. It does not trust Pakistan to rein in the Taliban. Beijing is also concerned about its mining interests in eastern Afghanista­n, and is paying the Taliban to protect them.

The Taliban make promises, but no one trusts them. In 2001, when the Taliban were fleeing Kabul from the advancing Northern Alliance, China (that had given them weapons) refused them sanctuary in Xinjiang. The fundamenta­list Taliban know that an atheist nation can never be their friend. China has around 22 million acknowledg­ed Muslims—they are the country’s Achilles heel. Hence its brutal treatment of the adherents to a religion that it hates.

China’s target is not a specific community, but the Islamic faith—it has destroyed mosques (in one recent egregious case to build a public toilet), burnt Qurans, forbidden fasting during Ramzan, and outlawed halal diets. China is committing crimes against humanity in its treatment of the Uyghur ethnic minority and other Turkic Muslims in Xinjiang, with Beijing responsibl­e for “policies of mass detention, torture, and cultural persecutio­n, among other offenses”, Human Rights Watch said in a report on 19 April 2021. The 53-page report, titled “Break Their Lineage, Break Their Roots” documented a “range of abuses” that also include enforced disappeara­nces, mass surveillan­ce, separation of families, compelled returns to China, forced labour, sexual violence, and violations of reproducti­ve rights. The report, which was authored with the help of Stanford Law School’s Human Rights and Conflict Resolution Clinic noted that while Beijing’s oppression of Turkic Muslims is “not a new phenomenon”, with growing evidence for years of China’s brutal repression of its minorities—mass surveillan­ce, arrests without cause, forced labour, detention camps, torture and murder—has reached “unpreceden­ted levels” in 2021. Since 2017, when Beijing intensifie­d its crackdown, arrests in Xinjiang (with 1.5% of the population) accounted for a fifth of all arrests in China, the report said. Arrests in the region increased threefold in the last five years. Up to a million people have been detained in 300 to 400 facilities, including “political education” camps, pretrial detention centres and prisons. Children whose parents have been detained are sometimes placed in state institutio­ns.

The so-called Islamic Ummah that regularly criticizes Israel, Myanmar, India, and the United States for their alleged actions against Muslims, has kept quiet about China’s treatment of Uyghurs. In a most shameless act of commercial seduction, 37 nations, including several members of the OIC, signed a document applauding China’s action in Xinjiang. Pakistan’s drugaddict­ed Prime Minister says China is such a good friend, how can Pakistan criticize its oppression of Muslims?

After the recent sharp deteriorat­ion of its relations with the US, China worries that the US could use its continued military presence in Afghanista­n to support Uyghur dissidents seeking independen­ce from Beijing. Afghan Presidents Hamid Karzai and Ashraf Ghani, had tried to court Beijing hoping that it would pressurise Pakistan to rein in the Taliban. China did nothing. Even the promised Chinese investment of $100 million in its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) in Afghanista­n and the extraction of copper and oil never materialis­ed. With the Taliban seizing power, China’s “iron brother” Pakistan is celebratin­g their military victory and will have another button to press against Beijing—the infiltrati­on of Islamic extremist groups into Xinjiang. At a meeting with the Foreign Ministers of five Central Asian states on 12 May, China’s Foreign Minister urged them not to allow the US to station its forces in Central Asia after its military withdrawal from Afghanista­n.

Many Muslim majority countries in Central Asia, Southeast Asia, and West Asia have signed on to Beijing’s self-serving Belt and Road Initiative. China is the largest trading partner for and investor in some of these countries, and they fear losing access to Chinese money and markets if they criticize China over Xinjiang. The Uyghurs once lived at the heart of Asia’s greatest trading routes, but are now concentrat­ed far from the political, religious and economic centres of the Muslim world. Just two years ago, no one had heard of China’s genocide of the

Uyghurs. Now, voices are being raised, especially in the large Muslim-majority countries that permit the most space for media and civil society—malaysia, Indonesia, Turkey, Pakistan. Arab channels like Al Jazeera and Arab News have been reporting on the Uyghur issue. Amazingly, in early 2019, Turkey’s Foreign Ministry (perhaps seeking to score brownie points for Sultan Recep Erdogan) condemned China for “violating the fundamenta­l rights of Uyghur Turks and other Muslim communitie­s”. This may not have much immediate impact on China’s relationsh­ip with Muslim majority countries. Many of them see China as a counterwei­ght to the United States, just as they saw the USA as a counterwei­ght to colonial European powers of the 20th century.

Years of military alliances, invasions, interventi­ons, and overreach have left many government­s in the Middle East with the impression that the US is an untrustwor­thy partner, and China could be an effective counterwei­ght. However, underlying this romance with China, is the conviction that when push comes to shove, the West (and countries like India—which is why so many Middle Eastern nations are strengthen­ing their relations with India) will ride in on a white steed to clobber China.

China’s obduracy with the

Uyghurs and the Tibetans will permanentl­y destroy its global image. Whatever the warts and failures of the US, Europe, and India, none of them have been accused of anything quite like a genocidal campaign against a domestic Muslim group. Southeast Asia is angry with China’s encroachme­nt on their territoria­l waters even as Beijing pushes its BRI projects. According to a Pew Research Centre Poll early this year, only a third of Indonesian­s had a favourable opinion of China, as against half, a year earlier.

Beijing has acted with a sense of impunity in Xinjiang and Tibet. Its policies are coming back to haunt it. In January 2021, the United States was the first country to declare the human rights abuses in Xinjiang as genocide. This was followed by Canada’s House of Commons and the Dutch parliament each passing non-binding motions in February 2021 to recognize China’s actions as genocide. In April 2021, the UK House of Commons unanimousl­y passed a similar non-binding motion. In May 2021 the New Zealand parliament unanimousl­y declared that “severe human rights abuses” were occurring against the Uyghur people in China. The Seimas of Lithuania has just passed a resolution recognizin­g that the Chinese government’s abuse of the Uyghurs is genocide.

Several countries, including the US, European

Union, United Kingdom and Canada, have imposed targeted sanctions. In October 2020, in a stinging rebuke to China, 39 countries (including most of the EU member states, as well as Canada, Haiti, Honduras, Australia and New Zealand) chastised China in the UN for its violation of the rights of the Uyghurs and its repression in Hong Kong. 18 countries had done so in 2018. The UN initiative was led by Germany’s ambassador, but three months later Germany piloted the Eu-china Comprehens­ive Agreement on Investment!

Instead of reading the writing on the wall, China’s blind officials, unable to understand criticism, hit back. Its wolf-warrior ambassador to the UN said the signatorie­s spread false informatio­n and political virus, and interfered in China’s internal affairs. The Xinjiang regional government retorted that the sanctions over human rights violations in Xinjiang were “waste paper” whose real purpose was to hamper Chinese companies internatio­nally. Beijing organised media tours of Xinjiang but reporters who have travelled independen­tly to investigat­e the allegation­s were blocked by authoritie­s and hounded by police.

The European Parliament passed a resolution in December 2020 on forced labour and the situation of the Uyghurs in Xinjiang that deeply deplored the ongoing persecutio­n and the serious and systematic human rights violations that amount to crimes against humanity. It called on private sector companies to assess their engagement with the Xinjiang region and if human rights were not complied with. It asked China to allow an internatio­nal observatio­n group to conduct independen­t observatio­ns in the Xinjiang region. The British Foreign Minister (I am no admirer of his) called the abuse of Uyghur Muslims

in Xinjiang “one of the worst human rights crises of our time”. Canada’s Foreign Ministry said: “Mounting evidence points to systemic, state-led human rights violations by Chinese authoritie­s”. A BBC investigat­ion published in February 2021 contained first-hand testimony of systematic rape, sexual abuse and torture of detainees. One woman testified that women were removed from their cells “every night” and raped by one or more masked Chinese men. A former guard at one of the camps, who spoke on condition of anonymity, described torture and food deprivatio­n of inmates. In a “thank you” response, China banned the BBC.

China initially denied the existence of the camps, before defending them as a necessary measure against terrorism. In 2021, the European Union approved sanctions against four Chinese officials involved in running internment camps for Uyghurs in Xinjiang including travel bans and asset freezes. Reacting like a wounded canine, China said the EU sanctions were “based on nothing but lies and disinforma­tion”, and counter-sanctioned EU officials and entities in Europe “that severely harm China’s sovereignt­y and interests and maliciousl­y spread lies and disinforma­tion”. This infuriated the European Parliament which overwhelmi­ngly voted to freeze the ratificati­on of the December 2020 Eu-china investment deal. In a stronglywo­rded resolution on 20 May 2021, the Parliament also deplored what it called the “crimes against humanity” taking place against the Uyghur Muslim minority and the crackdown on the democratic opposition in Hong Kong. True to form, the Chinese government responded to the European Parliament’s vote by calling on Brussels to “immediatel­y stop interferin­g in China’s internal affairs (and) abandon its confrontat­ional approach” and played its wellworn CD that the Eu-china Agreement was a balanced and win-win deal that benefits both sides, rather than a “gift” or favour bestowed by one side to the other.

Clearly, the “curb Chinese abuses” chorus is rising towards a crescendo

The 2021 census report from China (duly modified by Pingpong) suggests a slowing population growth rate and ageing population (thanks to its one child policy) so, like machines, Han couples are being programmed to have three children. However, Pingpong will prove that the disastrous one-child policy has not created an ageing China since Chinese mothers, thanks to its amazing scientists, now deliver healthy babies in nine weeks instead of nine months. Lately, a credible peer-reviewed analysis by a German researcher, suggests that birth-control measures against Muslims could cut up to 4.5 million births of Uyghurs and other minorities in Xinjiang within 20 years. Expect the Chinese to retort: “Nonsense, the Uyghurs are doing it voluntaril­y so as to be absorbed into the great Han community more easily”.

Meanwhile, the military transition­al Government of Sudan has agreed to let former dictator Omar Al Bashir be tried by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court for crimes against humanity in the Darfur region. China should realize the eternal wisdom of Kautilya in his 2,200-year-old Arthashast­ra: Direct administra­tion of conquered territory could require more effort, money or even blood than it was worth.

Many Muslim majority countries in Central Asia, Southeast Asia, and West Asia have signed on to Beijing’s self-serving Belt and Road Initiative. China is the largest trading partner for and investor in some of these countries, and they fear losing access to Chinese money and markets if they criticize China over Xinjiang.

Ambassador Dr Deepak Vohra is Special Advisor to Prime Minister, Lesotho, South Sudan and Guinea-bissau; Special Advisor to Ladakh Autonomous Hill Developmen­t Councils, Leh and Kargil.

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