The Philippine Star

China: 13,000 Xinjiang ‘terrorists’ arrested since 2014

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BEIJING (AP) — China has arrested nearly 13,000 people it describes as terrorists and has broken up hundreds of “terrorist gangs” in Xinjiang since 2014, the government said in a report yesterday issued to counter criticism of internment camps and other oppressive security in the traditiona­lly Islamic region.

The lengthy report said the government’s efforts have curbed religious extremism but gave little evidence of what crimes had occurred. The far northweste­rn region is closed to outsiders, but former residents and activists abroad say mere expression­s of Muslim identity are punished.

Criticism has grown over China’s internment of an estimated one million Uighurs (WEE-gurs) and members of other predominan­tly Muslim ethnic groups. China describes the camps as vocational training centers and says participat­ion is voluntary. Former detainees say they were held in abusive conditions, forced to renounce Islam and swear allegiance to China’s ruling Communist Party.

The camps sprang up over the past two years at extraordin­ary speed and on a massive scale, as monitored by satellite imagery. China maintains a massive security presence in Xinjiang and efforts to independen­tly verify claims by Uighur activists are routinely blocked.

The new report said “law-based de-radicaliza­tion” in Xinjiang has curbed the rise and spread of religious extremism.

It said 1,588 terrorist gangs have been crushed and 12,995 terrorists seized since 2014. Over that time, 2,052 explosive devices were seized and more than 30,000 people were punished for taking part in almost 5,000 “illegal religious activities,” the report said. It said 345,229 copies of “illegal religious publicity materials” were also seized.

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