China; Leak reveals the scale of Beijing’s repressive control over Xinjiang

Chinese detainees in Xinjiang re-education camp

A leaked cache of secret Chinese Government documents reveals how authorities in Xinjiang province red-flagged 23 Australian citizens during a security crackdown that consigned tens of thousands of people to arbitrary detention and mass indoctrination.

Key points:

  • Leaked Chinese government documents relate to the network of “training and education” camps in Xinjiang
  • They shed more light on the system of mass surveillance and detention used to subjugate minorities
  • Details about the operation of detention facilities show they are run like maximum security jails

The documents tell how the Australian citizens were identified among 75 people from China’s Muslim minorities who were singled out in the surveillance sweep because of their passports.

While the fate of the Australians is unknown, the confidential report instructs public security officials to deport or detain those foreign passport holders for whom “suspected terrorism cannot be ruled out”.

Read much more here: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-11-25/china-cables-beijings-xinjiang-secrets-revealed/11719016

China’s Surveillance State Has Tens of Millions of New Targets…

A damaged surveillance camera is seen at Tai Koo MTR station in Hong Kong on Oct. 3.
A damaged surveillance camera is seen at Tai Koo MTR station in Hong Kong on Oct. 3. ANTHONY KWAN/GETTY IMAGES

One evening in the summer of 2017, local police in China made a surprise inspection of a small private language school, checking the visas of all non-Chinese attendees. Among those present was a foreign doctoral student, who had left his passport at his hotel. “Not to worry,” said the officer. “What’s your name?” The officer took out a handheld device and entered the student’s name. “Is this you?” Displayed on the screen was the researcher’s name, his passport number, and the address of his hotel.

This kind of incident is common in Xinjiang, where China has extensively deployed technology against Muslim minorities. But this episode took place in Yunnan province, near China’s southern border with Myanmar. In fact, public security bureaus—the network of agencies in China that deal with domestic security and intelligence—across the country are using electronic databases coupled with handheld tools to keep track of certain categories of people. These “key individuals,” as they are officially known, range from paroled criminals and users of drugs to foreigners, petitioners, and religious believers.

More: https://foreignpolicy.com/2019/10/21/china-xinjiang-surveillance-state-police-targets/?fbclid=IwAR2H1CWFB28dT-z62zA15dxzfi1AsI-mE1GHSg37bsWLSY1cgb7tFEnvtCI

 

Cotton On and Target Australia stop buying cotton from Xinjiang over human rights concerns

 

Four Uyghur inmates of the Kaifaqu internment camp in Lop county, with their names written in Uyghur, are (L-R) Mamtimin, Aziz Haji Shangtang, Eli Ahun Qarim, and Abdulla Haret. A fifth man, Abduleziz Haji, has also been identified.

Cotton On and Target Australia have stopped sourcing cotton from China’s Xinjiang province due to concerns about mass human rights abuses there by Chinese authorities.

Cotton On Group completed an internal investigation into its supply chain after Four Corners revealed in July that Uyghur Muslims were being rounded up as part of a detention program and forced to work in textile factories in Xinjiang.

Four Corners also revealed that Target Australia was already conducting an internal review into where it sourced its cotton from in Xinjiang.

The Australian branches of Jeanswest, Dangerfield, Ikea and H&M were also revealed to source cotton from Xinjiang, which is described by the UN as resembling a “mass internment camp”.

Cotton On sourced cotton from Xinjiang

Full Story: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-10-17/target-cotton-on-drop-suppliers-after-four-corners-investigation/11607518

Kohl’s Croft and Barrow denies factory in Xinjiang makes their clothes despite video, satellite evidence..

 

The ABC has obtained video footage showing a factory in China’s Xinjiang region making clothes for one of America’s biggest retailers — but the company in question claims the footage has been “spliced”.

Key points:

  • The video shows pants sold by the US retailer Kohl’s being made in Xinjiang
  • Kohl’s questioned the video’s accuracy and said the footage was “spliced”
  • The Chinese firm making the clothes has an “education and training centre” factory

A promotional video for the Chinese clothing manufacturer Golden Future showed employees at its factory in Xinjiang making stretch pants for the label Croft & Barrow.

Full story: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-07-20/xinjiang-us-retail-giant-kohls-denies-factory-made-their-clothes/11318736

Australian universities announce reviews over links to surveillance tech by Chinese Government

Facial recognition technology in China

Two Australian universities are reviewing funding and research approval procedures due to concerns over links to technology that is being used to carry out mass human rights abuses by the Chinese Government in Xinjiang province.

Key points

  • UTS, Curtin unis launch reviews amid links to surveillance technology used in China
  • One academic conducted research for so-called “racial profiling” technology to detect ethnic minorities
  • Human Rights Watch says China uses AI and surveillance to carry out human rights abuses against ethnic minorities

Last night, Four Corners revealed that the University of Technology Sydney (UTS) is conducting an internal review into its $10 million partnership with CETC, a Chinese state-owned military tech company that developed an app that Chinese security forces use to track and detain Muslim Uyghur citizens in Xinjiang.

Full Story: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-07-16/australian-unis-to-review-links-to-chinese-surveillance-tech/11309598

 

Major Fashion Retailers investigate suppliers after forced labour of Uyghurs exposed in China

Screenshots of Dilnur Abdurehim talking to her sister on the phone

On a cold Melbourne afternoon in June this year, 34-year-old Gulnur Idreis’s phone started to ring. It was a video call coming from her elderly parents in Xinjiang, China. Any contact with them was precious.

Key points

  • New evidence that China is funnelling Uyghurs from re-education camps into factory work
  • Major fashion retailers are now investigating whether their suppliers use forced labour
  • Women have spoken out about being forced to work in factories making clothes and gloves

Like all members of the Uyghur Muslim minority in China, they had spent the past two years living through a dystopian nightmare.

In early 2017, the Communist Party began a new incarceration campaign, rounding up, detaining and forcibly indoctrinating Uyghurs and other Muslim minority ethnic groups in the far-western region. Islam has effectively been outlawed in the far-western region, with people routinely labelled as extremists and imprisoned for practising their religion.

Full Story: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-07-15/uyghur-forced-labour-xinjiang-china/11298750