Bangkok Post

CHINESE ABUSE OF UIGHURS MAKING WAVES IN JAPAN

- By Ben Dooley and Hisako Ueno in Tokyo

Last summer, Halmat Rozi, an Uighur Muslim living in Japan, received a video call from his brother in Xinjiang in western China. His brother said he had someone he wanted Rozi to meet: a Chinese security officer.

Chinese President Xi Jinping had been invited to Japan, and the officer had some questions. Were Rozi and his fellow Uighur activists planning protests? Who were the group’s leaders? What work were they doing? If Rozi cooperated, his family in China would be well cared for, the officer assured him on a second video call.

The officer’s intent was clear — to discourage Rozi from doing anything that might hurt China’s reputation in Japan. The warning had the opposite effect. Rozi had invited the Japanese public broadcaste­r NHK to surreptiti­ously record the second call, which was later broadcast to millions of viewers.

The video provided a rare look at Beijing’s efforts to intimidate Chinese ethnic minorities abroad, and it has contribute­d to a growing awareness in Japan of China’s repression of Uighurs in Xinjiang.

That, in turn, has increased pressure on the Japanese government to take strong action after years of tiptoeing around China.

So far, Japan has mustered little more than expression­s of “grave concern” over the fate of the Uighurs, hundreds of thousands of whom have been put into “re-education” camps in recent years in what critics say is an effort to erase their ethnic identity.

Japan is the only member of the Group of 7 industrial powers that did not participat­e in coordinate­d sanctions imposed on Chinese officials last month over the situation in Xinjiang, which the US government has declared a genocide.

The Communist Party in Beijing has rejected accusation­s of genocide in Xinjiang and is unlikely to cave to any amount of pressure over its policies, which it says are necessary to combat “terrorism and extremism”.

But if Japan were to fully join the effort to compel China to end its human rights abuses there, it would add a crucial Asian voice to what has otherwise been a Western campaign.

As in the West, views toward China have hardened in recent years among the Japanese public — not just over Xinjiang but also over Beijing’s crushing of democratic freedoms in Hong Kong and its military presence in the seas near Japan.

After years of ambivalenc­e toward China, “public opinion has clearly shifted” and has “suddenly become extremely severe”, said Ichiro Korogi, a China expert at Kanda University of Internatio­nal Studies near Tokyo.

In some ways, the Japanese government’s tone on China has already toughened. When two US cabinet officials visited Tokyo last month, their Japanese counterpar­ts signed a joint statement criticisin­g China over its “coercion and destabilis­ing behaviour” in the Asia-Pacific region and its violations of the “internatio­nal order”.

But Japan’s leaders and businesses have powerful reasons to hold their fire on China, a critical market for Japanese exports and investment. Any perceived criticism can quickly backfire, as the Swedish fashion retailer H&M learned last month when it became the target of a nationalis­t boycott in China for expressing concern about accusation­s of forced labour in Xinjiang’s cotton industry.

By contrast, the Japanese retail company Muji, which has more than 200 stores in mainland China, recently declared that it would continue to use cotton from Xinjiang despite the accusation­s.

Despite the economic and geopolitic­al risks, a growing group of lawmakers are calling for Japan to defend Uighur rights. Members of Parliament are working on legislatio­n that would give the government powers to impose sanctions over human rights abuses. As well, a broad cross-section of politician­s were pushing Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga to cancel Xi’s state visit to Japan before it was delayed for a second time by the pandemic.

The Uighur community in Japan, estimated to be fewer than 3,000 people, has become more visible in the past year as it presses the government to act. Rozi’s story has played no small part. Since the broadcast last year of his call with the Chinese security officer, Rozi — a fluent Japanese speaker — has appeared in the news media and before a parliament­ary group to discuss the abuses in Xinjiang.

The stories of other Uighurs have also found a wider Japanese audience in recent months, including in a bestsellin­g graphic novel featuring testimony from women who had been imprisoned in the Xinjiang camps.

As awareness has increased in Japan, concerns about Chinese rights abuses have grown across the political spectrum.

For years, complaints about China’s treatment of its ethnic minorities were considered the purview of Japan’s hawkish right wing. Centrists and those on the left often saw them as pretexts for replacing Japan’s postwar pacifism with the pursuit of regional hegemony.

But China’s behaviour in Xinjiang has forced a reassessme­nt among many liberals. Even Japan’s Communist Party is calling it “a serious violation of human rights”.

“China says this is an internal problem, but we have to deal with it as an internatio­nal problem,” said Akira Kasai, a member of Parliament and one of the party’s top strategist­s.

Last summer, nearly 40 members of the Japanese Legislatur­e formed a committee for rethinking Tokyo’s relationsh­ip with Beijing. Another parliament­ary committee dedicated to promoting Uighur rights has expanded its membership to include lawmakers from centre-left opposition parties.

The groups, said Shiori Yamao, an opposition lawmaker, are pushing their colleagues to follow in the footsteps of the US government as well as parliament­s in Canada and the Netherland­s by declaring China’s actions in Xinjiang a genocide.

Members of Parliament say they are also working on a Japanese version of the Global Magnitsky Act, a US law used to impose sanctions on government officials around the world involved in directing human rights abuses.

It is unclear how much traction the efforts will get. Rozi does not believe that lawmakers will go so far as to accuse China of genocide, but he is hopeful that Japan will impose sanctions.

Rozi came to Japan in 2005 for a graduate programme in engineerin­g, eventually starting a constructi­on company and opening a kebab shop in Chiba prefecture, on Tokyo’s outskirts. He was not political, he said, and steered clear of any activities that might be viewed unfavourab­ly by the Chinese government.

Everything changed in 2018 after he learned that several members of his wife’s family had been detained. Communicat­ion with his own family had also become nearly impossible amid the security clampdown.

The experience convinced Rozi that he needed to speak out, and he soon began participat­ing in protests calling for China to close the camps. Before long, he had become a prominent voice in Japan’s Uighur community, making media appearance­s, meeting with politician­s and running seminars on the situation in Xinjiang.

When he received the surprise phone call from his brother, he knew that his activism had caught the attention of Chinese officials.

Since Rozi’s appearance on Japanese TV, the Chinese government has made no further attempts to contact him, he said. Phone calls to his family have gone unanswered.

He is afraid for his relatives. But speaking out has been worth it, he said: “Now pretty much everyone here knows about the Uighurs’ problems.”

“China says [Xinjiang] is an internal problem, but we have to deal with it as an internatio­nal problem” AKIRA KASAI Japanese MP

 ??  ?? After receiving an intimidati­ng video call from a Chinese official in Xinjiang, Halmat Rozi, an Uighur Muslim living in Tokyo, brought the video to NHK and a Japanese audience of millions.
After receiving an intimidati­ng video call from a Chinese official in Xinjiang, Halmat Rozi, an Uighur Muslim living in Tokyo, brought the video to NHK and a Japanese audience of millions.
 ??  ?? Halmat Rozi, an Uighur Muslim living in Japan, stages a protest against Chinese policies outside the Shibuya railway station in Tokyo in March.
Halmat Rozi, an Uighur Muslim living in Japan, stages a protest against Chinese policies outside the Shibuya railway station in Tokyo in March.

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