Khaleej Times

ASIA Xinjiang sees rise in arrests of Muslims

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beijing — Arrests skyrockete­d by more than 730 per cent last year in China’s far-western Xinjiang as the government ramped up a security crackdown in the traditiona­lly Muslim region, activists said on Wednesday.

The ruling Communist Party has justified increasing­ly tight policing of Xinjiang by saying it faces a threat from extremism and separatism, but many Muslims in the region accuse Beijing of religious and cultural repression.

Authoritie­s in Xinjiang arrested nearly 228,000 people on criminal charges in 2017, according to data compiled from official government sources by rights group China Human Rights Defenders (CHRD).

That’s around 21 per cent of all arrests in China last year, the group said, even though the sparsely populated region has only around 1.5 per cent of China’s nearly 1.4 billion population.

The dramatic increase in arrests followed the introducti­on of draconian new restrictio­ns on religious practices in Xinjiang, where about half the population of around 22 million are ethnic minorities.

“Though the government does not provide the data disaggrega­ted by ethnicity, criminal punishment would disproport­ionately target the Uighur Muslim group based on their percentage of the population,” CHRD wrote.

The report drew on public data released by Chinese prosecutor’s offices at the national and local levels.

Indictment­s in Xinjiang also increased at a rate “far out of proportion” to its population, amounting to a 422 per cent increase year-onyear in 2017, it said.

The increases follow significan­t drops in both statistics in 2016, when arrests fell by 20 per cent and indictment­s by 15 per cent, respective­ly.

China’s legal system has a conviction rate of over 99.9 per cent, virtually guaranteei­ng any indictment will end in a conviction.

China says its policies in Xinjiang are aimed at rooting out the “three forces” of separatism, religious extremism and terrorism.

Simmering resentment exploded

in deadly rioting by Uighurs in the regional capital Urumqi in 2009, and Uighurs have since been tied to mass stabbings and bombings that have left dozens dead across the country.

Civil unrest and clashes with government forces have killed hundreds more.

Last year marked a dramatic turning point in Beijing’s approach to the strategic region as the government in 2017 pushed its plans to foster greater trade with Central Asia and Europe, a programme that puts a premium on security.

In March, local authoritie­s introduced stringent new restrictio­ns on religious practices, forbidding beards and the wearing of veils and the distributi­on of religious content including everything from songs

with Arabic lyrics to unofficial editions of the Holy Quran.

Members of the Uighur diaspora say relatives have been arrested for seemingly innocuous acts such as sending Ramadan greetings to friends or downloadin­g music.

Authoritie­s are also believed to have detained hundreds of thousands of Muslims in a secretive network of extra-judicial political reeducatio­n centres, where inmates are given language and ideologica­l training and forced to participat­e in military-style drills.

The local government pumped more than $9 billion into security spending in 2017, nearly double the year before, according to Adrian Zenz, a China security expert at Germany’s European School of Culture and Theology. —

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