A Chinese demand
for the extradition of 11 Uyghurs from Malaysia puts the spotlight
on China’s roll-out of one of the world’s most intrusive surveillance systems,
military moves to prevent Uyghur foreign fighters from returning to Xinjiang,
and initial steps to export its security approach to countries like Pakistan.
The 11 were among 25 Uyghurs who escaped from a Thai detention centre in
November through a hole in the wall, using blankets to climb to the ground.
The extradition request follows similar deportations of Uyghurs from
Thailand and Egypt often with no due process and no immediate evidence that
they were militants.
Location of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in China. Source:
Wikipedia Commons.The escapees were among more than 200 Uighurs detained in
Thailand in 2014. The Uyghurs claimed they were Turkish nationals and demanded
that they be returned to Turkey. Thailand, despite international condemnation,
forcibly extradited to China some 100 of the group in July 2015.
Tens of Uyghurs, who were unable to flee to Turkey in time, were detained in
Egypt in July and are believed to have also been returned to China.
Many of the Uyghurs were students at Al Azhar, one of the foremost institutions
of Islamic learning.
China, increasingly concerned that Uyghurs fighters in Syria and Iraq
will seek to return to Xinjiang or establish bases across the border in
Afghanistan and Tajikistan in the wake of the territorial demise of the Islamic
State, has brutally cracked down on the ethnic minority in its strategic
north-western province, extended its long arm to the Uyghur Diaspora, and is
mulling the establishment of its first land rather than naval foreign military
base.
The crackdown appears, at least for now, to put a lid on intermittent
attacks in Xinjiang itself. Chinese nationals have instead been targeted in
Pakistan, the $50 billion plus crown jewel in China’s Belt and Road
initiative that seeks to link Eurasia to the People’s Republic through
infrastructure.
The attacks are believed to have been carried out by either Baloch
nationalists or militants of the East Turkestan Independence Movement (ETIM), a
Uighur separatist group that has aligned itself with the Islamic State.
Various other groups, including the Pakistani Taliban, Al Qaeda and the
Islamic State have threatened to
attack Chinese nationals in response to the alleged repression of
Uyghurs in Xinjiang.
ETIM militants were believed to have been responsible for the bombing in August 2015 of Bangkok’s
Erawan shrine that killed 20 people as retaliation for the forced
repatriation of Uighurs a month earlier.
The Chinese embassy in Islamabad warned
in December of possible attacks targeting “Chinese-invested organizations and
Chinese citizens” in Pakistan
China’s ambassador, Yao Jing, advised the Pakistani interior ministry
two months earlier that Abdul Wali,
an alleged ETIM assassin, had entered the country and was likely to
attack Chinese targets
China has refused to recognize ethnic aspirations of Uyghurs, a Turkic
group, and approached it as a problem of Islamic militancy. Thousands of
Uyghurs are believed to have joined militants in Syria, while hundreds or
thousands more have sought to make their way through Southeast Asia to Turkey.
To counter ethnic and religious aspirations, China has introduced what
must be the world’s most
intrusive surveillance system using algorithms. Streets in
Xinjiang’s cities and villages are pockmarked by cameras; police stations every
500 metres dot roads in major cities; public buildings resemble fortresses; and
authorities use facial recognition and body scanners at highway checkpoints.
The government, in what has the makings of a re-education program, has
opened boarding schools “for local children to spend their entire week in a
Chinese-speaking environment, and then only going home to parents on the
weekends,” according to China scholar
David Brophy. Adult Uyghurs, who have stuck to their Turkic
language, have been ordered to study Chinese at night schools.
Nightly television programs feature oath-swearing ceremonies,” in which
participants pledge to root out “two-faced people,” the term used for Uyghur
Communist Party members who are believed to be not fully devoted to Chinese
policy.
The measures in Xinjiang go beyond an Orwellian citizen
scoring system that is being introduced that scores a person’s
political trustworthiness. The system would determine what benefits a citizen
is entitled to, including access to credit, high speed internet service and
fast-tracked visas for travel based on data garnered from social media and
online shopping data as well as scanning of irises and content on mobile phones
at random police checks.
Elements of the system are poised for export. A long-term Chinese plan for China’s
investment in Pakistan, dubbed the China Pakistan Economic Corridor
(CPEC), envisioned creating a system of monitoring and surveillance in
Pakistani cities to ensure law and order.
The system envisions deployment of explosive detectors and scanners to
“cover major roads, case-prone areas and crowded places…in urban areas to
conduct real-time monitoring and 24-hour video recording.”
A national fibre optic backbone would be built for internet traffic as
well as the terrestrial distribution of broadcast media. Pakistani media would
cooperate with their Chinese counterparts in the “dissemination of Chinese
culture.”
The plan described the backbone as a “cultural transmission carrier”
that would serve to “further enhance mutual understanding between the two
peoples and the traditional friendship between the two countries.”
The measures were designed to address the risks to CPEC that the plan
identified as “Pakistani politics, such as competing parties, religion, tribes,
terrorists, and Western intervention” as well as security. “The security situation
is the worst in recent years,” the plan said.
At the same time, China, despite official denials, is building,
according to Afghan security officials, a military
base for the Afghan military that would give the People’s Republic a presence
in Badakhshan, the remote panhandle of Afghanistan that borders
China and Tajikistan.
Chinese
military personnel have reportedly been in the mountainous Wakhan
Corridor, a narrow strip of territory in north-eastern Afghanistan that extends
to China and separates Tajikistan from Pakistan since March last year.
The importance China attributes to protecting itself against Uyghur
militancy and extending its protective shield beyond its borders was reflected
in the recent appointment as its ambassador to Afghanistan, Liu Jinsong,
who was raised in Xinjiang and served as a director of the Belt and Road
initiative’s $15 billion Silk Road Fund.
No comments:
Post a Comment