The Guardian (USA)

Xinjiang births plummeted after crackdown on Uyghurs, says report

- Helen Davidson in Taipei

Birthrates in Xinjiang fell by almost half in the two years after the Chinese government implemente­d policies to reduce the number of babies born to Uyghur and other Muslim minority families, new research has claimed.

The figures show unpreceden­ted declines which were more extreme than any global region at any time in the 71 years of UN fertility data collection, including during genocides in Rwanda and Cambodia, according to the authors of the report by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (Aspi).

The data adds to mounting evidence of coercive fertility policies in Xinjiang, including first-person accounts of forced sterilisat­ion or birth control, and leaked policing data on the internment of women for violating family planning regulation­s.

They are among Chinese government policies believed to be designed to forcibly assimilate the Uyghur and other Muslim population­s. In April, Human Rights Watch determined the Chinese government was committing crimes against humanity but said the extent of coercive birth control and sexual violence, while alarming, needed more investigat­ion.

The authors of the report, Nathan Ruser and James Leibold, said they compiled it using publicly available Chinese government statistics to create datasets of county-level birthrates from 2011 to 2019, and comparing counties with higher proportion­s of Uyghur and other Muslim minorities.

It covered the period before, during, and after the implementa­tion of the Chinese Communist party’s campaigns against “illegal births” in April 2017, when authoritie­s also stopped publishing statistics on the birthrates of separate minority groups.

Aspi’s report found the birthrate across Xinjiang fell by 48.74% between 2017 and 2019. In counties where the population was at least 90% non-Han Chinese, the birthrate dropped by an average 56.5% between 2017 and 2018. By examining county-level statistics, the report provided further evidence of “the systematic targeting” of communitie­s, it said.

“Previous research by both Chinese and foreign experts has examined the tightening of birth control policy in Xinjiang and a correspond­ing drop in natural population growth beginning in 2015, but even more dramatical­ly after 2017,” it said.

Among the evidence cited in the report, Aspi also included state media reports about crackdowns on “illegal births”, and the collection of US$1m from 629 families over four months in a single county. In other areas authoritie­s launched hotlines and rewarded people who informed on their neighbours, and punished officials who failed to meet targets.

“The crackdown has led to an unpreceden­ted and precipitou­s drop in official birthrates in Xinjiang since 2017. The birthrate across the region fell by nearly half (48.74 %) in the two years between 2017 and 2019,” said the report.

Citing state media, the report said in 2017, 460 party members and state employees were punished for illegal births in Hotan prefecture, where 97% of the population is Uyghur or from other non-Han groups.

While China’s government enforced a one-child policy for decades, it allowed minority families to have three children in rural areas or two in urban areas. The report said while the overall birthrate for the Xinjiang region remained relatively stable throughout the period, many individual counties, especially in the Uyghur-majority south, had exceptiona­lly high birthrates in the past decade. There were 68 children born per 1,000 people in Kashgar in 2014, compared with 16.5 at the regional level.

Aspi said policymake­rs saw this as “an increasing­ly urgent problem and source of perceived instabilit­y, literally a breeding ground for the ‘three evil forces’ of extremism, terrorism and splitism”.

The Chinese government denies allegation­s of mistreatme­nt, genocide and crimes against humanity, saying many of its policies – including the mass detention network it says includes vocational training centres – are anti-terrorism efforts. It says birth control is entirely the choice of individual­s and there is no agency interferen­ce. This claim has been contradict­ed by women who claim they were coerced into sterilisat­ion or contracept­ion.

The crackdown on minority population growth comes at the same time the Chinese government is trying to stave off a demographi­c crisis due to low birthrates in the rest of the country, and an ageing population.

The Aspi report was published a day after the Chinese government released figures from its once-a-decade census, finding the decade to 2020 had the slowest annual population growth since the early 1960s. The census reported a bigger increase to China’s minority population compared with the Han population, however this was not broken down to county levels, and included the seven years prior to the major interventi­ons on fertility in Xinjiang.

“One thing we found is that in other provinces of similarly high minority population­s … the birthrate climbed by about 3% in the last decade,” said Ruser. “So these policies seem to be very deliberate­ly targeted towards the community of Xinjiang and the Uyghur community. When they talk about those general minority figures, I think you have to keep in mind there are 55 other minorities.”

 ??  ?? People line up at what the Chinese government says is a vocational training centre in Artux, in western China’s Xinjiang region. Photograph: Ng Han Guan/AP
People line up at what the Chinese government says is a vocational training centre in Artux, in western China’s Xinjiang region. Photograph: Ng Han Guan/AP

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