The Guardian (USA)

John Oliver explains China's 'appalling' treatment of Uighurs

- Adrian Horton

John Oliver returned to Last Week Tonight on Sunday with a segment demanding attention be paid to China’s persecutio­n and forced detention of the Uighurs, a mostly Muslim ethnic minority from the country’s north-west Xinjiang region, over a million of whom have been detained by the Chinese government in re-education camps.

“If this is the first time that you’re hearing about an estimated million people who’ve been held in detention camps – mostly Uighurs but also Kazakhs and other ethnic minorities – you are not alone,” said Oliver. “And it’s probably because China has done its level best to keep this story from getting out.”

Still, reports from earlier this month revealed that many Uighurs have been forcibly shipped to work in factories across China producing personal protective equipment (PPE) such as face masks in response to the pandemic in the US. In other words, “the very masks that some in this country see as unacceptab­le infringeme­nt on their personal liberty may be getting made by people who would absolutely love for their worst infringeme­nt to be getting politely asked to leave a fucking Costco,” said Oliver.

And while there is “clearly nothing new about horrific practices being hidden deep within the supply chain of global capitalism”, Oliver continued, “what is happening to the Uighurs is particular­ly appalling”.

Systemic government suppressio­n of the Uighurs – who number about 11 million in Xinjiang and are culturally, linguistic­ally and ethnically distinct from the Han Chinese who comprise 90% of the country’s population – builds on decades of discrimina­tion by the communist regime based in Beijing. The Chinese government has exacerbate­d longstandi­ng prejudice by some Han Chinese against Uighurs, largely based on the Uighurs’ Muslim faith in an aggressive­ly secular country, by encouragin­g Han migration to Xinjiang.

The prejudice, tension and extreme discrimina­tion boiled over into riots in Xinjiang’s capital in 2009, which killed more than 200 Han Chinese and spurred a decade-long crackdown by the central government; in 2014, the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, instituted the “Strike Hard Campaign Against Violent Terrorism”, which was “basically the Patriot Act on steroids”, said Oliver. “All of a sudden, Uighurs started being treated like they were all potential terrorists.”

Xinjiang is now one of the most heavily policed areas in the world, with authoritie­s “surveillin­g things that most people would find utterly meaningles­s”, said Oliver, such as growing a beard or applying for a passport. Flagged individual­s are entered into a predictive policing system which, according to one 2019 data leak, sent 15,000 Uighurs to “brainwashi­ng camps” during just one week in 2017.

The crackdown is a “sore subject” for the Chinese government, Oliver continued, which initially denied the existence of the camps and then downplayed them as “vocational” facilities.

But even strictly supervised state tours barely concealed their true role as Uighur prisons, as evidenced by leaked official documents encouragin­g staff to “strictly manage and control student activities to prevent escapes”.

“The phrase ‘prevent escapes’ is something of a tell there,” said Oliver. “If your employee handbook says ‘prevent escape’, you’re probably working at a prison or at the very least, a Scientolog­y picnic.”

During the pandemic, the government has escalated the existing work-transfer deportatio­n of Uighurs out of Xinjiang, and “as you’ve probably guessed, this isn’t a benevolent jobs program”, Oliver said. “The idea, as one local government report put it, is that sending Uighurs far from home will allow ‘distancing them from religiousl­y extreme views and educating them’,” by sending a conservati­vely estimated 80,000 Uighurs to factories benefiting such multinatio­nal companies as Nike over a two-year period.

When contacted by Last Week Tonight, Nike said the factory no long employed Uighur workers and company representa­tives “are conducting ongoing diligence with our suppliers in China”. Which “feels like their policy on oversight is less ‘just do it’, and more ‘just talk about doing it and hope people eventually stop asking’”, Oliver retorted.

More broadly, “going forward, the entire global community needs to do more”, Oliver concluded, calling for the UN to appoint independen­t investigat­ors to look into China’s abuses in Xinjiang, government­s to speak out “without bending to China’s economic influence”, and companies such as Nike to clean up their supply chains while “actively using their financial leverage to pressure the Chinese government to end these abuses”.

But none of this will occur, he argued, without a redirectio­n of individual attention. “I know that raising awareness is often a bullshit solution that doesn’t really solve a problem, but there can be a real benefit to awareness even if it is coming through a TikTok makeup tutorial or,” he added, pointing to himself, “the exact opposite of one.

“When you’re dealing with a concerted campaign centered on cultural erasure, one of the most important things we can do is continue to pay attention.”

 ?? Photograph: YouTube ?? John Oliver on China’s treatment of the Uighurs: ‘When you’re dealing with a concerted campaign centered on cultural erasure, one of the most important things we can do is continue to pay attention.’
Photograph: YouTube John Oliver on China’s treatment of the Uighurs: ‘When you’re dealing with a concerted campaign centered on cultural erasure, one of the most important things we can do is continue to pay attention.’

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