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China’s Mass Genocide: An introduction

  • Writer: respublica international
    respublica international
  • Aug 16, 2020
  • 2 min read

By Zaineb Sharif



In the past week, a video of a little Uyghur boy being beaten has been circulating around social media. In the video, the boy is being kicked and hit, and in the end a man is seen putting a lit cigarette in his shirt. This video as well as many hundreds are going around while the governments in power remain silent. The crackdown on Uyghurs has been going on since 2014, as they are trying to fight the “war on terror”.


In June of 2019, twenty-two nations submitted a letter criticizing China and its mass- incarceration of Uyghur Muslims in Xinjiang. A second letter resurfaced in support of China and it’s policy including many Muslim- majority nations such as Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Qatar, and many more. Quite interestingly these countries rely heavily on China, but yet dismiss the violations of human rights happening.


China chooses to defend itself and calls these camps “re-education centers” aimed to provide job skills. Outside the camps, Xinjiang is heavily regulated by the government and local officials monitoring their every move. Police checkpoints check for identification while taking photographs and fingerprints that are secured in a database program. Mosques are shut down, men are refrained from keeping beards, and women are forced to take off their hijabs.

So how severe is this situation? The Chinese Communist Party has reportedly detained between one million and three million, and use torture methods to brainwash them in becoming loyal to the Communist state.


But it doesn’t just stop there, many Uyghurs are reportedly being used as cheap labor for large scale companies, there have been numerous reports of sexual abuse against women, and many more harsh conditions. Detainees in these camps have no contact with the outside world, and a lucky few have been able to escape. According to Vox, this is the largest mass internment of an ethnic-religious minority group since World War II. The immoral acts committed during the Holocaust still lingers and haunts the world, there cannot be another one.


Resources



For more information on what is going on in Xinjiang, please visit Human Rights Watch

Sign these petitions:

No Rights. No Games. The choice is simple: Respect Uyghur rights and close the camps, or lose the Olympics.

Petition for the immediate release of professor Rahile Dawut and other Uyghur scholars

Donate to UHRP to support their work:

  • Providing emergency humanitarian relief for Uyghur refugees

  • Interviewing concentration camp survivors to help tell their story to the world

  • Campaigning to end "business as usual" while Uyghurs are suffering crimes against humanity






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