Stamford Advocate

Documents reveal how China detention camps work

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The watch towers, doublelock­ed doors and video surveillan­ce in the Chinese camps are there “to prevent escapes.” Uighurs and other minorities held inside are scored on how well they speak the dominant Mandarin language and follow strict rules on everything down to bathing and using the toilet, scores that determine if they can leave.

“Manner education” is mandatory, but “vocational skills improvemen­t” is offered only after a year in the camps.

Voluntary job training is the reason the Chinese government has given for detaining more than a million ethnic minorities, most of them Muslims. But a classified blueprint leaked to a consortium of news organizati­ons shows the camps are instead precisely what former detainees have described: Forced ideologica­l and behavioral reeducatio­n centers run in secret.

The classified documents lay out the Chinese government’s deliberate strategy to lock up ethnic minorities even before they commit a crime, to rewire their thoughts and the language they speak.

The papers also show how Beijing is pioneering a new form of social control using data and artificial intelligen­ce. Drawing on data collected by mass surveillan­ce technology, computers issued the names of tens of thousands of people for interrogat­ion or detention in just one week.

Taken as a whole, the documents give the most significan­t descriptio­n yet of hightech mass detention in the 21st century in the words of the Chinese government itself. Experts say they spell out a vast system that targets, surveils and grades entire ethnicitie­s to forcibly assimilate and subdue them — especially Uighurs, a predominan­tly Muslim Turkic minority of more than 10 million people with their own language and culture.

“They confirm that this is a form of cultural genocide,” said Adrian Zenz, a leading security expert on the far western region of Xinjiang, the Uighur homeland.

Zenz said the documents echo the aim of the camps as outlined in a 2017 report from a local branch of the Xinjiang Ministry of Justice: To “wash brains, cleanse hearts, support the right, remove the wrong.”

China has struggled for decades to control Xinjiang, where the Uighurs have long resented Beijing’s heavyhande­d rule. After the 9/11 attacks in the United States, Chinese officials began justifying harsh security measures and religious restrictio­ns as necessary to fend off terrorism. Hundreds have died since in terror attacks, reprisals and race riots, both Uighurs and Han Chinese.

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