Uyghur Detention Camps: Finding Out One Missing Family Member is Alive
Citizen Truth, 22 May 2019
By Amina Elidrissy In a previous report by Citizen Truth, we spoke with three Uighur women affected by the Uighur detention camps in the Xingjian province of China. One of the women featured in the report was Fatimah Abdulghafur, a 39-year-old Uighur woman who lost contact with her family in 2017 after their detention in a camp. Since our report published, Citizen Truth received the good news from Fatimah that she received proof her brother is still alive. But she and other Uighurs are desperate for more news about their families.
One Family Member is Alive
On May 13 Fatima shared the news of her brother’s appearance with Citizen Truth and on her Twitter account. She posted a recent-appearing picture of her brother with his son, which she said she received from her sister-in-law in Xinjiang. It is still not certain yet whether he is free from the detention camp or not.
For Fatimah, her brother Abdusami, a 33-year-old airport express deliverer had been missing for three years. He was held in one of the detention camps in Kashgar where he was arrested, according to Fatimah. Fatimah says that her father, mother and young sister are still in those camps.
She told Citizen Truth that Chinese authorities took her father at Korla city in Xinjiang province at the end of 2016. Months later, they took her brother and then came back to take her mother and younger sister Meryem Abdulghafur.
Fatimah keeps hoping that by raising awareness of the plight of Uighurs in China she can compel China to release the rest of her family and the hundreds of thousands to millions of other Uighurs detained in China, as well. Like Fatimah, they all are hoping to hear any news or see pictures of their loved ones and learn that they are still alive.
According to Chinese authorities, some Uighurs are released for weekends to visit their families, after which they return to the camp for continued training.
What is Happening to Uighurs in China?
Since 2016 multiple reports have revealed that Uighurs, a Muslim sect in China and other countries, are in concentration-like camps in Eastern Turkestan, which is the modern-day Xinjiang province in northwestern China.
Uighurs say that China wants to convert them forcefully to Han Chinese. They aren’t allowed to practice their religion (Islam) or speak their own language and preserve their ethnic identity and customs.
Uighur activists say the Chinese are forcing those in detention camps to eat pork and drink alcohol, which are against their religious doctrines, and learn Mandarin, Chinese culture and history to assimilate them and other Muslim minorities in Xinjiang such as Kazakh, Kyrghyz and Tajik.
U.S. State Department official Scott Buzby estimated the number of Uighur detainees is anywhere from 800,000 to more than 2 million, while Dr. Adrian Zenz, a Columbia University researcher specializing in Chinese ethnic policies, assessed that 1.5 million Uighurs are detained.
An investigation by ABC News featured new research by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI), which identified 28 new detention camps. The research showed that since the beginning of 2017, the 28 camps have expanded their footprint by more than 2 million square meters. The same study published satellite “before and after” pictures of many existing camps. The pictures unfold how camps are expanding in many of Xinjiang’s cities, such as Kashgar, Urumqi and Hotan.
One of the prefectures in Kashgar increased in size from 3,700m2 in 2016 to 122,000m2 in 2018; another in Hotan went from 37,900m2 in 2016 to 102,000m2, based on satellite pictures, and in Urumqi, new facilities have been built such as one that appears in pictures that spans 526,500 m2.
Life in the Uighur Detention Camps
The vast international criticism and denouncement has led Chinese authorities to organize trips for international journalists to some of Xinjiang camps in an attempt to prove the camps are merely vocational camps where Uighurs receive job training.
Rare up-close photos of Xinjiang's re-education camps by @tompeter
Our @specialreportshttps://t.co/1pkLJZnM5s pic.twitter.com/T6kebKh4ns
— Philip Wen (@PhilipWen11) November 29, 2018
"Now that Turkey has condemned China's detention of one million Uighur Muslims for forced renunciation of Islam, it's time for it to build a coalition at the UN Human Rights Council for a fact-finding mission to Xinjiang."
Daily Brief:https://t.co/1Wg58nZOFu pic.twitter.com/ejIcDbTIaW
— Human Rights Watch (@hrw) February 15, 2019