Weekend Herald

China expanding secret detention centres: report

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China appeared to be expanding its network of secret detention centers in Xinjiang, where Muslim minorities are targeted in a forced assimilati­on campaign, and more of the facilities resemble prisons, an Australian think tank found.

The Australian Strategic Policy Institute used satellite images and official constructi­on tender documents to map more than 380 suspected detention facilities in the remote Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, highlighti­ng re-education camps, detention centers and prisons that have been newly build or expanded since 2017.

The report builds on evidence that China has made a policy shift from detaining Uighurs and other Muslim minorities in makeshift public buildings to constructi­ng permanent mass detention facilities.

This is despite Chinese state news agency Xinhua reporting late last year that “trainees” attending “vocational education and training centres” meant to deradicali­se them had “all graduated”.

Predominan­tly Muslim minorities in the remote Xinjiang region have been locked in camps as part of a government assimilati­on campaign launched in response to decades of sometimes violent struggle against Chinese rule.

Some have been subjected to forced sterilisat­ion and abortion, and ordered to drink traditiona­l Chinese medicines to combat the coronaviru­s.

Australian Strategic Policy Institute researcher Nathan Ruser wrote in a report released yesterday: “Available evidence suggests that many extrajudic­ial detainees in Xinjiang’s vast ‘re-education’ network are now being formally charged and locked up in higher security facilities, including newly built or expanded prisons, or sent to walled factory compounds for coerced labour assignment­s.”

At least 61 detention sites had undergone new constructi­on and expansion work in a year to July 2020, the report said.

These included at least 14 facilities still under constructi­on this year.

“Of these, about 50 per cent are higher security facilities, which may suggest a shift in use from the lowersecur­ity, ‘re-education centres’ towards higher-security prison-style facilities,” Ruser wrote.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? People line up at the Artux City Vocational Skills Education Training Service Centre at the Kunshan Industrial Park in Artux in western China's Xinjiang region.
Photo / AP People line up at the Artux City Vocational Skills Education Training Service Centre at the Kunshan Industrial Park in Artux in western China's Xinjiang region.

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