Daily Trust Sunday

What’s happened to the vanished Uighurs of Xinjiang?

- Source: BBC.com

ODetention in the desert n 12 July 2015 a satellite swung over the rolling deserts and oasis cities of China’s vast far west. One of the images it captured that day just shows a patch of empty, untouched, ashen-grey sand.

It seems an unlikely place to start an investigat­ion into one of the most pressing human rights concerns of our age.

But less than three years later, on 22 April 2018, a satellite photo of that same piece of desert showed something new.

A massive, highly secure compound had materialis­ed.

It is enclosed with a 2km-long exterior wall punctuated by 16 guard towers.

The first reports that China was operating a system of internment camps for Muslims in Xinjiang began to emerge last year.

The satellite photograph was discovered by researcher­s looking for evidence of that system on the global mapping software, Google Earth.

It places the site just outside the small town of Dabancheng, about an hour’s drive from the provincial capital, Urumqi.

To try to avoid the suffocatin­g police scrutiny that awaits every visiting journalist, we land at Urumqi airport in the early hours of the morning.

But by the time we arrive in Dabancheng we’re being followed by at least five cars, containing an assortment of uniformed and plain-clothes police officers and government officials.

It’s already clear that our plan to visit a dozen suspected camps over the course of the next few days is not going to be easy.

As we drive up the wide approach road we know that sooner or later the convoy behind is going to try to stop us.

While still a few hundred metres away, we see something unexpected.

The wide expanse of dusty ground, shown on the satellite image to the east of the site, is empty no more.

In its place, a huge extension project is taking shape.

Like a mini-city sprouting from the desert and bristling with cranes, are row upon row of giant, grey buildings - all of them four storeys high.

With our cameras rolling we try to capture the extent of the constructi­on, but before we can go much further one of the police cars swings into action.

Our car is stopped - we’re told to turn off the cameras and to leave.

But we’ve discovered something of significan­ce - a huge amount of extra activity that has so far gone unnoticed by the outside world.

In remote parts of the world, Google Earth images can take months or years to update.

Other public sources of satellite photograph­y however - like the European Space Agency’s Sentinel database - provide much more frequent images, although they’re of a much lower resolution.

It is here that we find what we are looking for.

An October 2018 Sentinel image shows just how much the site has grown compared with what we’d expected to see.

What we suspected to be a big internment camp, now looks like China is accused of locking up hundreds of thousands of Muslims without trial in its western region of Xinjiang. The government denies the claims, saying people willingly attend special “vocational schools” which combat “terrorism and religious extremism”. Now a BBC investigat­ion has found important new evidence of the reality. an enormous one. people there now. They have some themselves to the coursework. The facilities are exclusivel­y for

And it is just one of many similar, problems with their thoughts.” There is no mention of the Xinjiang’s Muslim minorities, many large prison-type structures that This giant facility would of grounds on which the students have of whom do not speak Chinese as have been built across Xinjiang in course fit no objective definition of been chosen for this “study” or how their mother tongue. the past few years. a school. long the courses last. The video suggests the school

Before our attempt to visit the In Xinjiang “going to school” has But there are clues. is operating a dress code - not a site, we’d stopped in the centre of come to take on a meaning all of its The interviews sound more like single one of the female students is Dabancheng. own. confession­s. wearing a headscarf.

It was impossible to speak “I have deeply understood my “I have deeply understood my There are more than 10 million openly to anyone - minders lurked mistakes” own mistakes,” one man tells the Uighurs in Xinjiang. menacingly close by and would China has consistent­ly denied camera, vowing to be a good citizen They speak a Turkic language aggressive­ly debrief anyone who that it is locking up Muslims “after I get home”. and resemble the peoples of Central even exchanged a greeting with us. without trial. The main purpose of these Asia at least as much as they do

Instead, we telephoned random But a euphemism for the camps facilities, we’re told, is to combat China’s majority population, the numbers in the town. has long existed - education. extremism, through a mixture Han Chinese.

What was this large complex Almost certainly as a response of legal theory, work skills and The southern city of Kashgar, it is with its 16 watchtower­s that the to the mounting internatio­nal Chinese language training. often pointed out, is geographic­ally authoritie­s were so desperate to stop criticism, the authoritie­s have begun That last item shows that closer to Baghdad than it is to us filming? to double down on this descriptio­n, whatever you want to call them Beijing - and it sometimes feels

“It’s a re-education school,” one with a full-on propaganda drive. - schools or camps - the intended culturally closer too. hotelier told us. State-run TV has been showing target is the same. And with a history of rebellion

“Yes, that’s a re-education glossy reports, full of clean and resistance to Chinese rule, the school,” another shopkeeper agreed. classrooms and grateful students, relationsh­ip between the Uighurs “There are tens of thousands of apparently willingly submitting and their modern-day political masters has long been as fraught as it is distant.

Before Communist rule, Xinjiang occasional­ly slipped from China’s grip with brief periods of independen­ce. Ever since, it has constantly tested that grip with sporadic outbreaks of protest and violence.

The mineral wealth - in particular oil and gas - of a region almost five times the size of Germany has brought huge levels of Chinese investment, rapid economic growth and large waves of Han Chinese settlers.

Resentment among Uighurs over the perceived uneven distributi­on of the proceeds of that growth has simmered.

In response to such criticisms, the Chinese authoritie­s point to rising living standards for Xinjiang’s residents.

But in the past decade or so, hundreds of lives have been lost to a mixture of riots, inter-community violence, premeditat­ed attacks and the police response.

In 2013, an attack on pedestrian­s

in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square, which claimed two lives as well as the three Uighur occupants of the car, marked a significan­t moment.

Although relatively small in terms of fatalities it rattled the foundation­s of the Chinese state.

The following year, 31 people were slaughtere­d by knife-wielding Uighur attackers at a train station in the Chinese city of Kunming, more than 2000km away from Xinjiang.

Over the past four years, Xinjiang has been the target of some of the most restrictiv­e and comprehens­ive security measures ever deployed by a state against its own people.

These include the large-scale use of technology - facial recognitio­n cameras, monitoring devices that read the content of mobile phones and the mass collection of biometric data.

Harsh new legal penalties have been introduced to curtail Islamic identity and practice - banning, among other things, long beards and headscarve­s, the religious instructio­n of children, and even Islamic-sounding names.

The policies appear to mark a fundamenta­l shift in official thinking - separatism is no longer framed as a problem of a few isolated individual­s, but as a problem inherent within Uighur culture and Islam in general.

It coincides with a tightening grip on society under President Xi Jinping, in which loyalties to family and faith must be subordinat­e to the only one that matters - loyalty to the Communist Party.

The Uighurs’ unique identity makes them a target for suspicion.

That view has been reinforced by credible reports that hundreds have travelled to Syria to fight with various militant groups.

Uighurs are now subject to ethnic profiling at thousands of pedestrian and vehicle checkpoint­s while Han Chinese residents are often waved through.

They face severe travel restrictio­ns, both within Xinjiang and beyond, with an edict forcing residents to surrender all passports to the police for “safe keeping”.

Uighur government officials are prohibited from practising Islam, from attending mosques or from fasting during Ramadan.

Given all this, it is perhaps not that surprising that China has introduced another older and blunter solution to the perceived disloyalty of many of its Uighur citizens.

Despite the government’s denials, the most compelling evidence for the existence of the internment camps comes from a trove of informatio­n from the authoritie­s themselves.

Pages of local government tendering documents inviting potential contractor­s and suppliers to bid for the building projects have been discovered online by the German-based academic, Adrian Zenz.

They provide details about the constructi­on or conversion of dozens of separate facilities across Xinjiang.

In many cases the tenders call for the installati­on of comprehens­ive security features, such as watchtower­s, razor wire, surveillan­ce systems, and guardrooms.

Cross-referencin­g this informatio­n with other media sources, Zenz suggests that at least several hundred thousand and possibly over a million Uighurs and other Muslim minorities could have been interned for re-education.

The documents, of course, never refer to the facilities as internment camps, but as education centres, or in a more accurate translatio­n, “re-education centres”.

One of them almost certainly relates to the giant site we visited - a July 2017 tender for the installati­on of a heating system in a “transforma­tion through education school” somewhere in the district of Dabancheng.

In these euphemisms, and in the mundane measuremen­ts and quantities described, there is the unmistakab­le substance of a rapidly expanding network of mass confinemen­t.

“They want to delete Uighur identity”

In 2002, Reyila Abulaiti travelled from Xinjiang to the UK to study.

She met and married a British man, took British citizenshi­p and started a family.

Last year, her mother came for her usual summer visit, spending time with her daughter and grandson and doing a bit of London sightseein­g.

Xiamuxinue­r Pida, 66, is a welleducat­ed former-engineer with a long service record at a Chinese state company.

She flew back to Xinjiang on 2 June.

Having not heard from her, Reyila called to check she’d got home OK.

The conversati­on was brief and terrifying.

“She told me that the police were searching the house,” Reyila remembers.

It was Reyila who appeared to be the target of the investigat­ion.

She needed to send copies of her documents, her mother said proof of UK address, a copy of her British passport, her UK telephone numbers and informatio­n about her university course.

And then, after asking her to send them via a Chinese mobile chat service, Xiamuxinue­r said something that sent a chill down Reyila’s spine.

“Don’t call me again,” her mother told her. “Don’t call me ever.”

It was the last time her daughter would hear her voice.

She believes she has been in a camp ever since.

“My mum has been detained for no reason,” she says. “As far as I know, the Chinese government wants to delete Uighur identity from the world.”

The BBC has conducted lengthy interviews with eight Uighurs living overseas.

Their testimonie­s are remarkably consistent, providing evidence of the conditions and routines inside the camps and the broad basis on which people are detained.

Mainstream religious activity, the mildest dissent and any link with Uighurs living in foreign countries appear to be enough to sweep people into the system.

Each morning, when 29-year-old Ablet Tursun Tohti was woken an hour before sunrise, he and his fellow detainees had one minute to get to the exercise yard.

After lining up, they were made to run.

“There was a special room to punish those who didn’t run fast enough,” Ablet says. “There were two men there, one to beat with a belt, the other just to kick.”

The exercise yard can clearly be seen on the satellite photo of the camp where he says he was held, in the oasis town of Hotan in southern Xinjiang.

“We sang the song called ‘Without the Communist Party There Can Be No New China,’” Ablet says.

“And they taught us laws. If you couldn’t recite them in the correct way, you’d be beaten.”

He was there for a month in late 2015 and, in some ways, he is one of the lucky ones.

In the early days of the internment camps, the lengths of the re-education “courses” appear to have been shorter.

Over the past two years there are very few reports of anyone being released at all.

And since there has now been a mass recall of passports, Ablet was one of the last Uighurs able to leave China.

He has sought refuge in Turkey, a country with a sizeable Uighur diaspora because of strong cultural and linguistic links.

Ablet tells me that his 74-year-old father and eight of his siblings are in the camps. “There is no-one left outside,” he says.

Abdusalam Muhemet, 41, is also now living in Turkey.

He was detained by the police in Xinjiang in 2014 for reciting an Islamic verse at a funeral.

They eventually decided not to charge him, he says, but he still wasn’t free.

“They told me I needed to be educated,” he explains.

The facility he found himself in did not look like a school.

On the satellite photo, you can make out the guard towers and the double perimeter fencing of the Han’airike Legal Education Training Centre.

The rolls of razor wire can be identified from the shadows they cast under the harsh desert sun.

He describes the same routine of exercise, bullying and brainwashi­ng

Twenty-five-year-old Ali, not his real name, is one of those too scared to talk openly.

In 2015 he says he ended up in a camp after the police found a picture of woman wearing a niqab, a face veil, on his mobile phone.

“One old lady was there for having made a pilgrimage to Mecca,” he tells me, “and an old man for not paying his water bill on time.”

During one of the forced exercise sessions an official’s car entered the camp and the gate was briefly left open.

“Suddenly, a small child ran in towards his mother who was running with us.

“She went towards her child, embraced him and started crying.

“Then a policeman grabbed the woman by her hair and dragged the small child out of the camp.”

In place of clean surroundin­gs shown on state TV, a very different picture emerges.

“The doors of our dormitorie­s were locked at night,” Ablet says. But there were no toilets inside, they just gave us a bowl.”

There is no way of independen­tly verifying these accounts.

We asked the Chinese government about the allegation­s of abuse but have received no reply.

For Uighurs outside Xinjiang news has almost completely dried up. Fear breeds silence. Reports of people being deleted from family chat groups, or told never to call again, are now commonplac­e.

Two of the things most central to Uighur culture - faith and family - are being systematic­ally broken.

As a result of the detention of whole extended families, there are reports that many children are being placed in state orphanages.

Bilkiz Hibibullah arrived in Turkey in 2016 with five of her children.

Her youngest daughter, Sekine Hasan, who by now would be three and a half years old, stayed in Xinjiang with Bilkiz’s husband.

She did not yet have a passport and the plan was that, when she got one, the family would reunite in Istanbul. She never got that passport. Bilkiz believes her husband was detained on 20 March last year.

She has since lost contact with the rest of her family and now has no idea where her daughter is.

“In the middle of the night, after my other children have gone to bed, I cry a lot,” she says.

“There is nothing more miserable than not knowing where your

daughter is, if she is alive or dead.

“If she could hear me now, I’d say nothing but sorry.” The view from above Using only publicly available, open-source satellite data, it’s possible to shed light on Xinjiang’s dark secret.

GMV is a multinatio­nal aerospace company with experience of monitoring infrastruc­ture from space on behalf of organisati­ons like the European Space Agency and the European Commission.

Their analysts went through a list of 101 facilities located across Xinjiang - drawn up from the various media reports and academic research about the re-education camp system.

One by one, they measured the growth of new sites and the expansion of existing ones.

They identified and compared common features such as watchtower­s and security fencing - the kind of things needed to monitor and control the movement of people.

And they categorise­d the likelihood of each site actually being a security facility, placing 44 of them in the high or very high category.

Then they plotted the first detection by satellite of each of those 44 facilities over time.

Images show the extent of the building work that has taken place at part of the camp where Abdusalem Muhemet was held.

GMV cannot say what the sites are being used for. But it is clear that over the past few years China has been building a lot of new security facilities, at remarkable and increasing speed.

It is likely to be an underestim­ate of the true picture.

There is a striking conclusion - the recent trend is towards larger facilities.

The number of new constructi­on projects this year has fallen when compared with 2017.

GMV calculates that, from this set of 44 sites alone, the surface area of secure facilities in Xinjiang has expanded by some 440 hectares since 2003.

This measuremen­t refers to the whole site within the external security walls, not just the buildings.

But 440 hectares represents a lot of additional space.

For context, a 14-hectare site within the city of Los Angeles – containing the Twin Towers Correction­al Facility and the Men’s Central Jail - holds a combined total of almost 7,000 prisoners.

We took one of GMV’s findings - the increase in building size at the facility in Dabancheng and showed it to a team with long experience in prison design at the Australian-based Guymer Bailey Architects.

Using the measuremen­ts from the satellite images they calculated that, at an absolute minimum, the facility could provide space for about 11,000 detainees.

Even that minimum estimate would place it alongside some of the biggest prisons in the world.

Riker’s Island in New York, the largest in the US, has space for 10,000 prisoners.

Silivri Prison outside Istanbul, often referred to as Europe’s largest, is designed to house 11,000.

Guymer Bailey Architects (GBA) provided us with this analysis of the possible functions of the various buildings on the site.

Their minimum estimate for occupancy at Dabancheng assumes that the detainees are held only in single rooms.

If dormitorie­s were used instead then the total capacity at Dabancheng would increase dramatical­ly, GBA suggests, with an outer limit of about 130,000.

We also showed the images to Raphael Sperry, an architect and the president of the US-based organisati­on, Architects/Designers/ Planners for Social Responsibi­lity.

“This is a truly massive and bleak detention facility,” he told me.

“It appears as a place designed to pack as many people into as small an area as possible at the lowest constructi­on cost.

“I think 11,000 is likely a significan­t underestim­ate... From the available informatio­n we can’t tell how the interior is configured or what portion of the buildings is used for detention rather than other functions. Even so, your dormitory estimate of 130,000 people seems, sadly, quite possible.”

The lack of access to the site means there’s no way of independen­tly verifying this analysis.

We asked the authoritie­s in Xinjiang to confirm what the site at Dabancheng is used for but have received no response. Blocked Not all of Xinjiang’s internment camps are the same.

Some of the secure facilities have not been built from scratch, but are conversion­s of structures previously used for other purposes, like schools or factories.

These are often smaller and located closer to the centre of towns or cities.

In the northern county of Yining we tried to visit a number of such camps.

We’d seen local government procuremen­t documents for a project to create five “vocational skills education training centres” for the purposes of “safeguardi­ng stability”.

In the centre of town we stop outside a large group of buildings that used to be Yining Number 3 Middle School.

A high, solid blue steel fence now surrounds the site and there’s heavy security on the front gate.

There’s a new watchtower by the playground and another one by what used to be the football pitch.

The pitch is now completely covered by six long steel-roofed buildings.

Outside, visiting family members are queueing up at the security check.

Once again, wherever we go in the town, two or three cars follow us.

When we try to get out to film at one of the camps, this one surrounded by a grey fence, we’re stopped.

The officials, with hands over our camera lenses, tell us that there’s important military training taking place in the area today and we’re instructed to leave.

Outside the former school we see a family, a mother and two children, standing quietly by the fence.

One of the minders tries to stop them from talking but another appears to over-rule him. “Let them speak,” she says. I ask them whom they’re visiting. There’s a pause, before the young boy answers, “My dad”. The hands cover our lenses once again. In the city of Kashgar, the once bustling, beating heart of Uighur culture, the narrow streets are eerily quiet. Many of the doors are padlocked shut.

On one, we see a notice instructin­g people how to respond to questions about where their family members have gone.

“Say they’re being looked after for the good of society and their families,” it says.

The city’s main mosque is more like a museum.

We try to find out when the next prayer time is but no-one seems to be able to tell us.

“I’m just here to deal with tourists,” one official tells us. “I don’t know anything about prayer times.”

In the square, a few beardless old men sit chatting. We ask them where everyone else is. One of them gestures to his mouth, holding his lips together to signal that it’s too risky for him to talk to journalist­s.

But the other whispers: “No-one comes anymore.

A helmeted policeman, some distance away, is cleaning the mosque steps.

In the silence we can hear the sound of the slop of the water in the bucket and the swish of the mop, echoing across the square. Chinese tourists are taking photos. We leave Kashgar on the highway, heading southwest towards an area dotted with Uighur villages and farms, and a great many suspected camps.

We’re being followed as usual but soon we run into an unexpected obstacle.

Ahead of us, the highway appears to have just been closed.

The police officers manning the roadblock tell us that surface of the road has melted in the hot sun. “It’s not safe to proceed,” they say. We notice that the other cars are being directed into a car park in a shopping mall, and over the radio, we hear instructio­ns to hold them there “for a while”.

We’re told the wait could be four or five hours and we’re advised to turn around.

We look for alternativ­e routes, but another roadblock always seems to materialis­e, although the explanatio­ns change. One road is closed for “military training”. Four times, on four separate roads, we’re turned around before we finally have to admit defeat.

Just a few kilometres away lies another giant camp said to hold around 10,000 people. System of control There are Uighurs in positions of authority in Xinjiang.

Many of the government officials and police officers who tailed and stopped us were Uighurs.

If they feel in any way conflicted they cannot say it of course.

But while the system of profiling and control has been likened by some to Apartheid, clearly that is not entirely accurate. Many Uighurs do have a stake in the system. In reality a better parallel can be found in China’s own totalitari­an past.

As in the Cultural Revolution, a society is being told that it needs to be taken apart in order to be saved.

Shohrat Zakir, a Uighur and, in theory, the second most powerful politician in the region, suggests the battle has almost been won.

“In the past 21 months, no violent terrorist attacks have occurred and the number of criminal cases, including those endangerin­g public security, has dropped significan­tly,” he is reported to have told state media.

“Xinjiang is not only beautiful but also safe and stable.”

But when the detainees are released, what then?

The former camp inmates we spoke to were all burning with resentment.

And the world has yet to hear from anyone who has spent time in facilities like Dabancheng, the sinister and secretive facility of such immense proportion­s.

 ?? PHOTOS: ?? A still from a Chinese state TV report on the Uighur “schools” BBC.com
PHOTOS: A still from a Chinese state TV report on the Uighur “schools” BBC.com
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Bilkiz’s daughter Sekine, whom she has not seen for more than two years
Bilkiz’s daughter Sekine, whom she has not seen for more than two years
 ??  ?? Bilkiz Hibibullah
Bilkiz Hibibullah
 ??  ?? Ablet Tursun Tohti
Ablet Tursun Tohti
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Diamuxinue­r Pida, 66, is a well-educated former engineer with a long service record at a Chinese state company.
Diamuxinue­r Pida, 66, is a well-educated former engineer with a long service record at a Chinese state company.
 ??  ?? “They want to delete Uighur identity”
“They want to delete Uighur identity”
 ??  ?? Reyila Abulaiti
Reyila Abulaiti
 ??  ?? Satellite image of the site in Hotan where Abdusalam says he was held
Satellite image of the site in Hotan where Abdusalam says he was held
 ??  ?? Detention in the desert
Detention in the desert
 ??  ?? The padlocked door to a house in the city of Kashgar
The padlocked door to a house in the city of Kashgar
 ??  ?? Shohrat Zakir is the chairman of Xinjiang province and an ethnic Uighur
Shohrat Zakir is the chairman of Xinjiang province and an ethnic Uighur
 ??  ?? Ali (not his real name) is unwilling to be identified
Ali (not his real name) is unwilling to be identified

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