Bangkok Post

Beijing defends campaign against Uighur minority

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BEIJING: China’s campaign of pressure against the country’s Uighur Muslim minority has prevented the far-northweste­rn region of Xinjiang from becoming “China’s Syria” or “China’s Libya”, an official Communist Party newspaper said yesterday.

The Global Times editorial came after a UN anti-discrimina­tion committee raised concerns on Friday over China’s treatment of Uighurs, citing reports of mass detentions that is said “resembles a massive internment camp that is shrouded in secrecy’’.

Following attacks by radical Muslim separatist­s, hundreds of thousands of members of the Uighur and Kazakh Muslim minorities in Xinjiang have been arbitraril­y detained in indoctrina­tion camps where they are forced to denounce Islam and profess loyalty to the party.

The Global Times said the intense regulation­s in the region were merely “a phase that Xinjiang has to go through in rebuilding peace and prosperity’’.

The editorial did not directly mention the existence of the internment camps.

Denouncing what it called “destructiv­e Western public opinions,’’ the paper said, “peace and stability must come above all else’’.

“Through the strong leadership of the Communist Party of China, the national strength of the country and the contributi­on of local officials, Xinjiang has been salvaged from the verge of a massive turmoil,’’ the paper claimed. “It has avoided the fate of becoming ‘China’s Syria’ or ‘China’s Libya’.

Xinjiang has been enveloped in a suffocatin­g blanket of security for years, especially since a deadly anti-government riot broke out in the regional capital of Urumqi in 2009. Over recent months, monitoring groups and eyewitness­es say Uighurs have been summoned from abroad and across China and sent into detention and indoctrina­tion centres.

The roughly 10 million Uighurs only make up a tiny proportion of China’s almost 1.4 billion people and till date there has never been an insurgency that could challenge the central government’s overwhelmi­ng might.

When the UN’s Committee on the Eliminatio­n of Racial Discrimina­tion started reviewing China’s report in Geneva on Friday, Chinese delegation leader Yu Jianhua highlighte­d economic progress and rising living standards among other things.

Committee vice-chairwoman Gay McDougall said members are “deeply concerned’’ by “numerous and credible reports that we have received that, in the name of combating religious extremism and maintainin­g social stability, (China) has turned the Uighur autonomous region into something that resembles a massive internment camp that is shrouded in secrecy’’.

Ms McDougall said there were estimates that more than a million people “are being held in so-called counter-extremism centres and another 2 million have been forced into so-called re-education camps for political and cultural indoctrina­tion’’.

She did not specify a source for that informatio­n in her remarks at the hearing.

The Geneva-based committee continued its hearing yesterday. Mr Yu, China’s ambassador to the UN in Geneva, stated that China would respond to the main questions raised in Friday’s session at yesterday’s hearing.

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