The Guardian (USA)

China's white paper on forced labour suggests unease at western pressure

- Emma Graham-Harrison

China’s new white paper on forced labour in Xinjiang suggests a government uneasy about growing western pressure over abuses of Muslim minorities in the region

It also gives a rare, if oblique, glance into the scale of government attempts to reshape communitie­s in the region, detailing how 10% of the region’s population were relocated over the past year, after being dubbed “surplus rural workers”.

The white paper comes just days after the US said it would block imports of goods, including cotton, clothes and computer parts, from five companies based in Xinjiang, over concerns about forced labour.

The “Withhold Release Orders” come into effect immediatel­y, and Washington is considerin­g far more sweeping region-wide bans on products including cotton and tomatoes.

There is also pressure from the private sector; this week, H&M became the latest western company to say it would cut ties with producers in the region.

“My hunch is that the CCP issued the white paper because it fears economic consequenc­es,” said Timothy Grose, a professor of China studies with expertise in ethnic policy at the RoseHulman

Institute of Technology in Indiana.

“Reports of forced labor have circulated for over a year, so the timing of this white paper is interestin­g … Quite possibly, the CCP fears other countries will impose similar [import bans].”

Forced labour is part of a broad Chinese government campaign of repression against Muslim minorities in Xinjiang,

which has also involved reproducti­ve coercion and more than a million people being forced into a vast network of internment camps.

Details of the system have filtered out of the region slowly, with satellite images and survivor accounts helping piece together understand­ing of what is happening.

Beijing strenuousl­y denies there is any abuse in Xinjiang. It initially rejected reports of a new network of camps, and then later said the centres it had built were vocational and language training centres.

The paper may not shed direct light on the camp system. Although it describes 1.29 million people a year passing through vocational training, the Chinese language name for these centres is different from the one used in official documents to describe the internment and “re-education” camps.

However, it does make clear the scale on which communitie­s are being reshaped in Xinjiang. It claims that 2.6 million so-called “surplus” rural workers – or about 10% of all residents – were “relocated” in the year to June 2020, with 1.8 million moved the year before that.

A recent “surplus labour” policy in some regions of Xinjiang obliges those aged under 30 to travel outside Xinjiang to work and “eliminate old habits”, Grose said, while those aged 30 to 45 relocate within Xinjiang.

The white paper provides names of a few individual­s it says travelled thousands of kilometres from their homes for work, including in coastal Fujian province, and eastern Jiangxi and Anhui provinces. In most cases it does not say what their new work is.

The white paper also confirms that southern rural areas, a traditiona­l heartland of minority Uighur communitie­s and culture, have been a particular focus of government campaigns.

“Profound changes have taken place in the life, work and mentality of the people of all the ethnic groups in Xinjiang and particular­ly in southern Xinjiang,” the white paper said.

 ??  ?? The Artux City Vocational Skills Education Training Service Center in Xinjiang region, pictured in 2018. Photograph: AP
The Artux City Vocational Skills Education Training Service Center in Xinjiang region, pictured in 2018. Photograph: AP

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