The Guardian (USA)

Beijing using its financial muscle to target Uyghurs living abroad – report

- Lizzy Davies

China is using its unpreceden­ted economic clout across vast swathes of Asia and the Middle East to target Uyghur Muslims living beyond its borders through a sprawling system of transnatio­nal repression, a new report says.

Beijing’s crackdown on Xinjiang province, where more than 1 million people are thought to have been detained in a network of internment camps in recent years, has coincided with a rise in efforts to control Uyghurs living overseas, the report found.

In a database charting overseas targeting of Uyghurs by Beijing since 1997, researcher­s from the Oxus Society for Central Asian Affairs and the Uyghur Human Rights Project examined more than 1,500 cases of detention and deportatio­n, warning that number was almost certainly “just the tip of the iceberg”.

They found at least 28 countries to have been at some point complicit, most of them in the Middle East, north Africa and south Asia, with the rate of incidents accelerati­ng “dramatical­ly” from 2017.

Bradley Jardine, research director at the Oxus Society, said: “We’ve focused on what’s happened inside Xinjiang, where there’s a hi-tech surveillan­ce state under constructi­on. But what’s happening as well is that this state is being exported around the world.”

Released this week, No Space Left to Run calls for western countries to take in more Uyghur refugees and for greater regulation of the export of surveillan­ce technology.

“Stopping such transnatio­nal repression is a moral imperative,” it says. “Standing idly while the government of China targets its citizens abroad with impunity also undermines the credibilit­y of states to protect those within their borders, including their own citizens.”

An estimated 1 to 1.6 million Uyghurs

live outside China, according to the World Uyghur Congress, with the largest population­s in central Asia and Turkey. However, the new database reveals the scale of Beijing’s targeting, with countries around the world playing a role in a range of practices including harassment, surveillan­ce, detention and rendition.

Since 2017, it says, at least 695 Uyghurs have been detained or deported to China from 15 countries.

Increasing­ly, say the report’s authors, China’s economic power has enabled it to pressure countries to trade human rights for financial gain. The launch of the belt and road initiative (BRI) global infrastruc­ture project created “unpreceden­ted scope for transnatio­nal repression”, they add.

Of the 10 countries where they found China to have most frequently used transnatio­nal repression against the Uyghurs, Beijing was among the largest creditors in four: Pakistan, Kyrgyzstan, Cambodia and Myanmar.

“In other countries where repression [of Uyghurs] is growing, such as

Egypt, Turkey and the wider Middle East, China has emerged as a vital economic partner through BRI-related projects and infrastruc­ture,” they noted.

Until recently, Turkey had been regarded as something of a haven for Uyghurs, where President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan once described China’s actions in Xinjiang as “simply put, a genocide”.

But as Ankara has looked east to ward off its economic downturn, and relied on Beijing for vaccine supplies during the Covid-19 pandemic, fears have grown among exiles that solidarity is crumbling. In December, Beijing approved an extraditio­n treaty between the two countries and the deal is awaiting ratificati­on by Ankara’s parliament. In January, police in Istanbul detained three Uyghurs in a counter-terrorism raid.

“As China expands its role globally through the BRI, more states will likely become locked into relations of dependence, increasing China’s ability to coerce or co-opt them to assist in targeting diaspora members and exiles. Unchecked, China’s global war on the Uyghurs will continue to expand and accelerate as it has over the past five years,” say the report’s authors.

China has consistent­ly denied all accusation­s of wrongdoing in Xinjiang and says “re-education” camps are designed to offer Chinese language lessons and job support, as well as to combat religious extremism.

The Chinese embassy in Britain did not respond to a request for comment.

 ??  ?? The entrance to one of China’s ‘vocational skills education centres’ in Dabancheng, Xinjiang. Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters
The entrance to one of China’s ‘vocational skills education centres’ in Dabancheng, Xinjiang. Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters

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