lundi 18 novembre 2019

China's Final Solution

The stunning new evidence of China's crimes against humanity, 
By Ishaan Tharoor

We have known for some time now that China is carrying out something deeply unsettling in East Turkestan. 
The restive, far west region of the country is home to a number of Turkic Muslim minorities, including the Uighurs, who in the last half-decade have been swept up in large numbers by the dragnet of the central state
We know that roughly a million or more people have been subjected to a vast system of concentration camps, where they are cajoled to “Sinicize” and abandon their native Islamic traditions. 
There’s already been a great deal of international criticism: In Washington, both Republican and Democratic lawmakers have condemned China’s project of de facto cultural genocide
A report by a United Nations panel of experts warned this month that China’s methods could “deeply erode the foundations” of Chinese society.
But Chinese officials still hide behind the Potemkin villages of their own making. 
They insist that the camps are actually "job-training centers" where amenable East Turkestan residents are working to better assimilate into mainstream society through vocational schooling and language instruction. 
They point to the necessity of such measures to counter the reach of radical Islamist groups in the region. 
We know now, though, that Chinese authorities don’t actually believe their own party line.That’s because of the new details surfaced by an astonishing set of leaked documents obtained by the New York Times
The cache includes 403 pages of Communist Party directives, reports, notes from internal investigations and internal speeches given by party officials, including Xi Jinping
The Times’s story by Austin Ramzy and Chris Buckley, published this weekend, offers a rarely seen window into the deliberations of one of the world’s most opaque governments. 
And what we see is chilling.



Elizabeth Warren
✔@ewarren

The Chinese government’s cruel, bigoted treatment of Muslims and ethnic minorities is a horrifying human rights violation.
We must stand up to hatred and extremism at home—and around the world. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/11/16/world/asia/china-xinjiang-documents.html …

‘Absolutely No Mercy’: Leaked Files Expose How China Organized Mass Detentions of Muslims
More than 400 pages of internal Chinese documents provide an unprecedented inside look at the crackdown on ethnic minorities in the  East Turkestan colony.nytimes.com

11.2K
9:44 PM - Nov 16, 2019

It relays how a flurry of ethnic violence and attacks in the early part of the decade persuaded Xi to unleash the “organs of dictatorship” — his own words, in a private speech. 
This apparently involved mass roundups, the construction of a 21st-century Orwellian apparatus of control and surveillance and a systematic assault on the ability of the region’s residents to observe their Islamic faith. 
As a justification for the draconian clampdown, a top Chinese official in East Turkestan vwarned of the risks of placing “human rights above security” in a 10-page directive from 2017. 
The tranche of documents also points to internal disagreement about the repression in the region and was delivered to the Times by a figure from “the Chinese political establishment” who “expressed hope that their disclosure would prevent party leaders, including Xi, from escaping culpability for the mass detentions.”Perhaps the most striking document is a classified directive issued to local officials in an eastern East Turkestan city on how to talk to Uighur students who return from other parts of China and discover their relatives and friends have been disappeared into detention camps.
They were instructed to tell the students that their relatives had been “infected by unhealthy thoughts,” framing the state’s distrust of Muslim minorities in terrifyingly clinical terms. 
“Freedom is only possible when this ‘virus’ in their thinking is eradicated and they are in good health,” read the directive.The Times also reported on evidence of what appears to be a “scoring system” used by officials to determine who gets released from a camp. 
It incorporates not only the behavior of the detainees, but also the cooperation of relatives outside. “Family members, including you, must abide by the state’s laws and rules, and not believe or spread rumors,” officials were told to say. 
“Only then can you add points for your family member, and after a period of assessment they can leave the "school" if they meet course completion standards.”The new revelations fit into a wider, horrifying story of repression. 
China makes independent reporting in East Turkestan virtually impossible — and every foreign reporter invested in covering the story has to weigh the risk of endangering local fixers and sources, many of whom may have already been swept into detention
Meanwhile, analysis of satellite imagery led one researcher to conclude that the authorities have demolished 10,000 to 15,000 religious sites in East Turkestan in recent years. 
The Washington Post’s editorial page director Fred Hiatt declared: “In China, every day is Kristallnacht.”
A Washington Post report looked at the plight of one Uighur woman, Zumrat Dawut, who spent more than two months in a cell that was so cramped that the women there had to lie down in shifts. During the day, they recited propaganda slogans that included praise for Xi.
“When she was let go, she was forced to sign documents agreeing not to practice her religion and not to tell anyone what had happened in the camps,” my colleagues Emily Rauhala and Anna Fifield wrote
“After her detention, she was forced to pay a fine of more than $2,500 for breaking China’s family planning rules by having three, not two, children.”
Terrified by what would happen if she resisted, she complied with a suggestion to submit herself for a sterilization. 
Dawut, unlike countless of her brethren, managed to escape the country alongside her children and Pakistani husband and made her way to the United States, where she’s hoping to receive asylum. 
Her troubles captured the attention of U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who cited her as a victim of religious persecution.


isabella steger
✔@stegersaurus

This is the language now being used by Chinese officials and @hkpoliceforce to describe HK protesters. So i don’t think it’s a stretch for ppl here to keep East Turkestan in their minds when they’re putting up resistance. https://twitter.com/nytimes/status/1195729621519613953 …The New York Times
✔@nytimes
Replying to @nytimes
Publicly, Chinese officials say the East Turkestan camps provide job training. But privately, the documents show, they used words like "virus," "infected" and "eradicate" to justify mass detentions and plotted how they would manage and intimidate families that were torn apart.

535
5:12 PM - Nov 16, 2019

But Washington’s focus on the horrors in East Turkestan also comes at a time when the Trump administration has made it dramatically harder for refugees and asylum seekers to find sanctuary in the United States. 
Locked in a trade war with Beijing, Trump has remained conspicuously silent on pressing matters of human rights, both in East Turkestan and Hong Kong
And, indeed, the protesters in Hong Kong, where clashes with police are turning all the more violent, see China’s unrelenting, unflinching approach taken in East Turkestan as an omen of darker days to come under Beijing rule.
The New York Times report does point to small acts of resistance
In 2017, Wang Yongzhi, a local official in a prefecture in southern East Turkestan, quietly released 7,000 camp inmates of his own volition. 
As a result, he was stripped of his position, prosecuted and later pilloried as a “corrupt” official. 
“I undercut, acted selectively and made my own adjustments, believing that rounding up so many people would knowingly fan conflict and deepen resentment,” 
Wang wrote in a signed confession he may have given under duress. 
“Without approval and on my own initiative, I broke the rules.”

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