Arab News

Uighurs pay the price as China perfects its surveillan­ce technology

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In China’s western province of Xinjiang, Beijing is carrying out the most dramatic program of “re-education” since the collapse of the Soviet Union. There are between 10 million and 11 million native Uighurs living in the province. Of those, between 800,000 and 2 million are believed to be interred in re-education camps. Then there is the environmen­t China is creating in Xinjiang outside of the camps. By all accounts, Beijing has instituted a full-on surveillan­ce state in the province, exclusivel­y targeting the Uighur population. Many aspects of Uighur identity have been criminaliz­ed; there is even a ban on giving Muslim names to Uighur newborns.

Officially, Xinjiang is an autonomous region within China, similar to Tibet. And as in Tibet, this nominal constituti­onal distance from Beijing is a source of suspicion. Moreover, the Uighurs are a Muslim Turkic people, closely related to the Kazakhs, Kyrgyz and Tajiks across the border. The language, culture, religion and outlook of this people is much more closely aligned to those of the Central Asian “-Stans” than to Han China. Their history, too, is more closely related to the Central Asian Silk Road trade rather than the Chinese heartland.

Predictabl­y, this has produced some secessioni­st tendencies. By any account, these tendencies have been less pronounced than in Tibet, but this difference of degree seems to be lost on the Communist Party leadership in the capital. Secessioni­st voices have already been brutally suppressed and now the state is engaging in this full-scale project to eradicate the distinct identity of the Uighurs, even as they actively encourage Han Chinese people from the east to settle in the province.

The approach seems to be to replicate the successful plan of sinificati­on that was implemente­d in Tibet: Overwhelm the local population with state repression, shift the local demographi­cs until the dominant group in the region is the loyal Han Chinese brought in from the east, and then ease off the repression on an individual basis conditiona­l on cultural integratio­n with the new Han majority population.

The difference between Xinjiang and Tibet, however, is the widespread use of technology in the former for surveillan­ce of individual­s outside the re-education camps to control their movements, and to overwhelm their informatio­nal environmen­t. From one leaked facial-recognitio­n database alone, for example, it is known that the movements of more than

2.5 million Uighurs were monitored.

The most striking aspect of the Xinjiang situation, however, is not merely the scale and ambition of the efforts to erase a minority culture. We were already familiar with this aspect of Communist Party governance from the experience in Tibet. Rather, the most striking aspect is the revelation of the “scientific zeal” with which those charged with the policy are pursuing their aims.

This is not a haphazard effort to put a potentiall­y rebellious borderland minority in their place. What is on display there is a systematic technology of cultural reprogramm­ing based on an ostensibly scientific “theory of social stability” — in the words of some of the architects of the anti-Uighur program.

The parallels with Tibet are not incidental or insignific­ant, either. Many of the same people in charge of that program are leading the Xinjiang project, and are primarily the ones looking to formalize this template for cultural domination as a technology of “social stability” that could be deployed in any number of other circumstan­ces — domestical­ly in China, or abroad.

It is reasonable to expect that China will offer to export this “technology” elsewhere in the world when doing so aligns with its geopolitic­al interests.

For example, part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative includes the building of a large commercial port in Sittwe, Myanmar, as well as the road and rail infrastruc­ture to connect it with Yunnan province. Sittwe is adjacent to the lands of the Rohingya, the Muslim minority that the Myanmar Army has in the past year and a half almost entirely displaced over the border to refugee camps in Bangladesh.

If talks of repatriati­ng the Rohingya refugees ever produce concrete results, Myanmar already has built camps to house returnees. China could offer its “social stability technology” to Myanmar for use in those camps to “pacify” and “re-educate” the Rohingya, both for profit and to preempt instabilit­y close to Chinese infrastruc­ture investment­s.

From the point of view of Beijing, this would be a win-win situation — and it is a scenario that could be replicated in many places along the commercial routes and infrastruc­ture projects Beijing is building westward.

Beijing will have this technology in its arsenal and, in many locations, will have every incentive to use it. So will many of the already questionab­le local regimes scattered along China’s new Silk Road.

 ??  ?? DR. AZEEM IBRAHIM
DR. AZEEM IBRAHIM

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