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China and the Uighurs

Aug 26,2018 - Last updated at Aug 26,2018

Two weeks ago, Gay McDougall, co-chair of the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, alleged that up to a million people belonging to the Uighur and other Muslim minority groups in China’s northwestern province of Xinjiang have been detained in concentration camps to be “reeducated” about religion.

Hu Lianhe, who shapes the Communist Party Central Committee’s policies on minorities, sternly denied it: “The argument that 1 million Uighurs are detained in reeducation centres is completely untrue.”

He rather spoiled the effect of his denial, however, by telling the meeting that while China was not running a “de-Islamisation” programme in Xinjiang, “those deceived by religious extremists...shall be assisted by resettlement and reeducation.”

Resettled where? In detention camps, perhaps? And if not a million, then how many? Half-a-million? 2 million? The state-run Global Times then defended the detention camps that do not exist by claiming that Xinjiang had narrowly escaped a descent into mass violence and chaos.

“It is because of the party’s leadership, a powerful China, and the courage of local officials that Xinjiang has been pulled back from the verge of massive turmoil. It has avoided the fate of becoming ‘China’s Syria’ or ‘China’s Libya’.” That is not a denial of the policy; it is a justification of it.

You cannot have it both ways: China is detaining and “reprogramming” Muslims in Xinjiang, we do not say “brainwashing” any more, on a very large scale. It is doing so because it fears that the sporadic terrorist attacks that have hit cities in Xinjiang and even China proper may escalate as Daesh, defeated in Syria and Iraq, seeks to build support in other regions of the Muslim world.

Religion is not the root cause of Uighur unhappiness with Chinese rule; it is the deliberate effort to submerge their identity by settling millions of Han Chinese, the ethnic group who make up more than 90 per cent of China’s population, in the province that was once known as “Chinese Turkestan”.

Xinjiang was not even Chinese until the 1870s, when the Qing dynasty finally nailed down Chinese control over a crossroads region, part of the old Silk Road, that had been ruled by more than a dozen different mini-empires in the previous millennium.

It fell out of Chinese control again in the civil war of the 1930s and 1940s, becoming a independent “East Turkestan” republic backed by the Soviet Union. When the victorious Chinese communist army took back control in 1950, 73 per cent of the population were Uyghurs, with smaller Muslim ethnic groups like Kazakhs and Kirghiz accounting for perhaps another 6 or 7 per cent.

Only one-fifth of Xinjiang’s population was Han Chinese in 1950; today almost half is. Han immigration was spontaneous in the early days, but in recent decades the communist regime has encouraged and even subsidised it, in a deliberate attempt to create a loyal majority in the province. Muslim Xinjiang, like its neighbour to the south, Buddhist Tibet, is suspect because its religion gives it an alternative, “foreign” loyalty. 

As in Tibet, this attempt to make the population more “Chinese” only stimulated resentment and resistance among the former majority population, and the first anti-Chinese violence in Xinjiang began in the late 1990s. Almost 200 people, mostly Han Chinese, were killed in ethnic riots in Urumqi, the capital, in 2009, and since then there have been numerous knife, bomb and vehicle attacks in Xinjiang and in China proper.

The official Chinese response has been repression. A vast surveillance apparatus, from facial recognition software to mass DNA collection, blankets the province. Xinjiang’s 20 million people are only 2 per cent of China’s population, but the province accounts for 20 per cent of the country’s arrests. And now, mass detention and “reeducation” camps.

The genius responsible for these policies is Chen Quanguo, who previously used some of the same methods to suppress ethnic nationalism in Tibet. The detention camps appeared and human rights abuses intensified after he was made Communist Party secretary in Xinjiang in 2016, and he is now a member of the politburo in Beijing as a reward for his efforts.

It is all so predictable and futile. Ignore the real causes of the anger. The Uyghurs are much poorer than the Han newcomers and fear that they will lose their identity. Treat the symptoms instead. Blame the terrorism on religious fanatics who have been influenced by evil foreigners. Take a leaf out of George W. Bush’s book and go attack the evil foreigners.

Qi Qianjin, China’s ambassador to Syria, recently told the pro-government Syrian daily Al Watan that China is “following the situation in Syria, in particular after the [Bashar Assad regime’s] victory in southern Syria. Its military is willing to participate in some way alongside the Syrian army that is fighting the terrorists in Idlib and in any other part of Syria”.

And then they could invade Afghanistan. Everybody else has.

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