The Palm Beach Post

China denies interning Muslims in west

U.N. says Beijing is holding Uighurs in detention camps.

- ©2018 The New York Times

Nick Cumming-Bruce GENEVA — China issued a blanket denial Monday of accusation­s from United Nations experts that it had detained more than 1 million ethnic Uighur Muslims in re-education camps in the western region of Xinjiang.

Beijing has progressiv­ely tightened security in Xinjiang since an eruption of violence there in 2009, but the crackdown has escalated since 2016, when a new Communist Party secretary for the region began widely expanding security services and surveillan­ce.

Gay McDougall, a member of the U.N. Committee on the Eliminatio­n of Racial Discrimina­tion, spoke of the region Friday as becoming “something resembling a massive internment camp,” with mass detention, re-education and disappeara­nces.

At a hearing in Geneva on Monday, a 49-strong Chinese delegation met questions from the committee with flat contradict­ion.

“There is no such thing as re-education centers,” said Hu Lianhe, a senior Chinese Communist Party official.

“There is no torture, persecutio­n or disappeara­nce of repatriate­d personnel,” he added in response to questions about the fate of hundreds of students who had returned to Xinjiang.

Some of the students were reported to have died in detention or to have disappeare­d.

China did not target any ethnic minority, Hu said; its ethnic minorities lived in peace and contentmen­t, enjoying freedom of religious belief.

Authoritie­s have clamped down on violent terrorist activity and strengthen­ed “security and social management,” he said, acknowledg­ing only that minor criminals were provided with “assistance and education to assist them in their rehabilita­tion.”

Global Times, a stateowned English-language tabloid that often reflects the more hawkish end of official Chinese opinion, reacted Sunday to news reports of the allegation­s raised by the U.N. panel by accusing Western news media and politician­s of seeking to “stir trouble” and undermine Xinjiang’s stability.

“Peace and stability must come above all else,” it said in an editorial, and to achieve that, “all measures can be tried.”

While Chinese officials have not acknowledg­ed widespread detentions in Xinjiang, scholars and activists have compiled evidence including constructi­on work tenders, job postings and satellite images that indicate a rapid expansion of camps in the region.

Some articles in state news media suggest the camps have been built to offer Uighurs training in Chinese language and job skills. But they seem to be on the fringes of developed areas, with high walls and fences that would suggest those sent there are not free to come and go.

Sarah Brooks, an Asia specialist for the Internatio­nal Service for Human Rights, an advocacy group, said that China’s answers to the U.N. panel were “par for the course,” keeping to “a long-standing tradition of the Chinese government to give non-answers to deeply important questions.”

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