jeudi 1 août 2019

Uighurs challenge China to prove missing relatives are free

Diaspora and experts sceptical over claim inmates released from East Turkestan concentration camps
Agence France-Presse

At least 1 million ethnic Uighurs and members of other largely Muslim minority groups have been detained in camps in East Turkestan.

China’s claim that most inmates have been released from mass detention centres in East Turkestan colony has been met with scepticism by the Uighur diaspora, which has launched a social media campaign challenging Beijing to prove it.
Rights groups and experts say more than 1 million mostly Muslim ethnic minorities have been detained in internment camps in the tightly controlled north-west colony, home to China’s ethnic Uighur population.
On Tuesday a senior East Turkestan official told reporters “most” people held in the camps had been “returned to society”, though no figures were shared to back up the claim.
“It’s absolutely not true,” said Guly Mahsut, 37, a Uighur based in Canada. 
“One of my cousins and one of my tour guide friends, and my friend’s husband, they are still in the camps,” she told AFP.
Mahsut and other overseas Uighurs have responded to China’s claim with the hashtag #Provethe90%, featuring stories and photos of missing friends and family they have been unable to contact in East Turkestan.
The hashtag is a reference to remarks made by the East Turkestan chairman, Shohrat Zakir, who said “more than 90%” of those who “return to society ... have work that they like and find suitable”.
“China does not need to say they released most if they really did so,” said Arfat Erkin, an Uighur student in the US who used the #“Provethe90% hashtag in a tweet about his missing father. 
“All it needs is to give journalists normal access to those camps – not staged camps – and give official permission for Uighurs to contact their relatives abroad.”
Bahram Sintash, who has posted information about destroyed mosques and neighbourhoods in East Turkestan, also tweeted about his father, a retired editor who was detained in December 2017.
A foreign ministry spokeswoman, Hua Chunying, said on Wednesday she was not aware of the “specific number” of people who had left the centres. 
It is difficult to verify China’s claims as the government has made independent reporting in East Turkestan extremely challenging. 
Amnesty International’s director for East Asia, Nicholas Bequelin, said: “China is making deceptive and unverifiable statements in a vain attempt to allay worldwide concern for the mass detentions of Uighurs and members of other ethnic minorities in East Turkestan.” 
He said Amnesty had not received any reports of large-scale releases.
On a six-day trip to the region last month, AFP reporters were followed by plainclothes officials almost constantly. 
They encountered roadblocks and were turned away by security forces upon nearing some camps.
Beijing initially denied the existence of any internment camps. 
In October 2018 it began calling them “vocational education centres” in the face of mounting evidence in the form of government documents, satellite imagery and testimonies from escaped detainees.
Beijing claims the centres are a necessary counter-extremism measure, and that detainees learn subjects including Mandarin and Chinese law. 
But former inmates and rights groups say those held are subjected to political indoctrination and abuse. 
One ex-detainee told AFP he was forced to sing the Chinese national anthem every morning and to eat pork, which is prohibited in Islam.




Adil Mijit, a prominent Uighur comedian, has been missing since November 2018. 

Even if people were released, “how permanent is it?” asked Arslan Hidayat, the son-in-law of a prominent Uighur comedian, Adil Mijit, with whom he lost contact last November.
“They are still in East Turkestan and they can again be arbitrarily detained,” he said, adding that inmates could technically be released from detainment only to be sent to what some reports have described as forced labour camps.
“There are still so many hopeful Uighurs,” he said, explaining that some believed staying silent could help keep loved ones out of the camps.
Hidayat said China’s claim could affect “those who are already scared, people who don’t want to speak up, to stop them further.”

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