China’s Dark Secret Is Out, But The World Is
Silent
While the horrific stories of China’s re-education
programme have uncovered the rampant assault on the identity and culture of the
Uyghur Muslims, the reactions from the Muslim world are largely muted.
The western press is abuzz with stories about the “cultural cleansing”
orchestrated by the Communist Party in Xinjiang region of China. While the
horrific stories of China’s re-education programme have uncovered the rampant
assault on the identity and culture of the Uyghur Muslims, the reactions from
the Muslim world are largely muted. The spiral of silence is not limited to the
Muslim community, it spans across the world to democratic countries like India
where the voices for human rights and freedom are also mute.
As per media
reports, the Uyghurs are detained in re-education camps where they
are forced to eat pork and drink alcohol. They are coerced to
criticise and denounce their own ethnic group and belief system, coupled with
the indoctrination to accept the Communist Party of China’s (CPC) ideology.
This process is rampant across the Xinjiang region where one million Uyghurs
are detained in the camps, according to estimates of the
United Nations. The Chinese government is spending an immense
amount of money on building new camps and security infrastructure in the
region. In the eyes of party propagandists, these camps are similar to
hospitals for the treatments of an “ideological illness.” The torture in these
re-education camps has, in many cases, led to the death of detainees but so far
there is no estimate of a death toll.
One news report quotes a party
official saying: “Ideological illnesses are the same as physical
illnesses, in that they must be treated in time, and should never be ignored
and allowed to become serious. Otherwise, later we will regret it, as it will
be too late.. Being infected by religious extremism and violent terrorist
ideology and not seeking treatment is like being infected by a disease that has
not been treated in time, or like taking toxic drugs.”
There is, in fact,
a significant influence of religious extremism and radicalization in Xinjiang,
but the Communist Party is holding the entire population of this ethnic
minority with separatist tendencies hostage in the name of religious extremism.
China’s reaction is out of proportion and has faced severe criticism from the
UN and American officials. What started as a campaign to eradicate extremist
elements in the region has now become a widespread campaign to culturally
integrate the Uyghurs.
Xinjiang, the
largest province of China, covers an area of 1,660,000 sq km, and has a
population of around 22 million. Aksai Chin, a part of the Indian state of
Jammu and Kashmir occupied by China is part of the same region and shares
borders with Pakistan, Afghanistan and other Central Asian countries. Uyghurs
are one of the 55 officially recognised minority groups in China and constitute
45 percent of the Xinjiang population.
While the ethnic
minority is at the receiving end of the worst form of persecution, the world
does not bat an eye.
China’s all-weather
friend Pakistan has not deemed it right to raise a voice for the Uyghurs.
Pakistanis have, in their self-proclamations, shown great zeal defending,
supporting and protecting Muslims across the world. Be it the cause of
Palestinians, the persecution of Rohingyas or any other issue of Muslims,
Pakistanis are always on the forefront.
However, in the
case Uyghur Muslims the trumpet has lost the sound. Not just the government of
Pakistan but also the people of Pakistan, including the liberals and Mullahs
are on the same page. Their silence has given a tacit approval to the
persecution of Uyghurs and thus become a passive accomplice of China.
On the other hand,
the Muslim world has also been conspicuously silent, a hypocrisy quite similar
to that of Pakistan. The Arab world, owing to vested interests, has seemingly
ignored the fact that one million Muslims are being forced into camps to
cleanse their belief in Islam. In fact, the Chinese authorities have declared
them a disease suffering with “ideological illness” to justify torture and
forceful indoctrination.
This selective
outrage is another indicator of how the champions of the Islamic cause can
betray an ethnic Muslim community, for their own stakes. Islamists, who are
known for decreeing against the persecution of Muslims, seem unfazed by the
plight of Uyghurs.
Similarly, no one
is outraged in India. China has in the past, needled India on the Kashmir
issue, but India could respond in equal measure by raising the persecution of
Uyghurs at the diplomatic level. After the Doklam crisis, New Delhi has avoided
antagonizing Beijing. Therefore, it is very unlikely that the Indian government
will voice concerns on the issue.
In the past, the
champions of human rights and civil liberties in India have raised an
empathetic cry in favour of the Rohingyas, and organised demonstrations in
favour of the Palestinians, and most recently, on the issue of shifting the US
Embassy in Jerusalem. The Left in India has advocated for many global causes
and has always walked hand-in-hand with the Muslims of the country, to raise a
voice against the wrongful persecution of Muslims. Yet, both the Left and
Muslims in India are abnormally silent on the issue.
China is setting a dangerous
precedent in Xinjiang. It is imperative for the global Muslim community and
human rights defenders to treat the Palestinians, Rohingyas and Uyghurs on an
equal pedestal, and impose pressure on Beijing to stop its evil campaign in
Xinjiang.
By Khalid Shah
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