China is deliberately
separating Muslim children from their families, faith and language in its far
western region of Xinjiang, according to new research.
At the same time as
hundreds of thousands of adults are being detained in giant camps, a rapid,
large-scale campaign to build boarding schools is under way.
Based on publicly available
documents, and backed up by dozens of interviews with family members overseas,
the BBC has gathered some of the most comprehensive evidence to date about what
is happening to children in the region.
Records show that in one township
alone more than 400 children have lost not just one but both parents to some
form of internment, either in the camps or in prison.
Formal assessments are
carried out to determine whether the children are in need of “centralised
care”.
Alongside the efforts to
transform the identity of Xinjiang’s adults, the evidence points to a parallel
campaign to systematically remove children from their roots.
China’s tight surveillance
and control in Xinjiang, where foreign journalists are followed 24 hours a day,
make it impossible to gather testimony there. But it can be found in Turkey.
In a large hall in
Istanbul, dozens of people queue to tell their stories, many of them clutching
photographs of children, all now missing back home in Xinjiang.
“I don’t know who is
looking after them,” one mother says, pointing to a picture of her three young
daughters, “there is no contact at all.”
Another mother, holding a
photo of three sons and a daughter, wipes away her tears. “I heard that they’ve
been taken to an orphanage,” she says.
In 60 separate interviews,
in wave after wave of anxious, grief-ridden testimony, parents and other
relatives give details of the disappearance in Xinjiang of more than 100
children.
They are all Uighurs –
members of Xinjiang’s largest, predominantly Muslim ethnic group that has long
had ties of language and faith to Turkey. Thousands have come to study or to do
business, to visit family, or to escape China’s birth control limits and the
increasing religious repression.
But over the past three
years, they have found themselves trapped after China began detaining hundreds
of thousands of Uighurs and other minorities in giant camps.
The Chinese authorities say
the Uighurs are being educated in “vocational training centres” in order to
combat violent religious extremism. But evidence shows that many are being
detained for simply expressing their faith – praying or wearing a veil – or for
having overseas connections to places like Turkey.
For these Uighurs, going
back means almost certain detention. Phone contact has been severed – even
speaking to relatives overseas is now too dangerous for those in Xinjiang.
With his wife detained back
home, one father tells me he fears some of his eight children may now be in the
care of the Chinese state.
“I think they’ve been taken
to child education camps,” he says.
New research commissioned
by the BBC sheds light on what is really happening to these children and many
thousands of others.
Dr Adrian Zenz is a German
researcher widely credited with exposing the full extent of China’s mass
detentions of adult Muslims in Xinjiang. Based on publicly available official
documents, his report paints a picture of an unprecedented school expansion
drive in Xinjiang.
Campuses have been
enlarged, new dormitories built and capacity increased on a massive scale.
Significantly, the state has been growing its ability to care full-time for
large numbers of children at precisely the same time as it has been building
the detention camps.
And it appears to be
targeted at precisely the same ethnic groups.
In just one year, 2017, the
total number of children enrolled in kindergartens in Xinjiang increased by
more than half a million. And Uighur and other Muslim minority children,
government figures show, made up more than 90% of that increase.
As a result, Xinjiang’s
pre-school enrolment level has gone from below the national average to the
highest in China by far.
In the south of Xinjiang
alone, an area with the highest concentration of Uighur populations, the
authorities have spent an eye watering $1.2bn on the building and upgrading of
kindergartens.
Mr Zenz’s analysis suggests
that this construction boom has included the addition of large amounts of
dormitory space.
Xinjiang’s education
expansion is driven, it appears, by the same ethos as underlies the mass
incarceration of adults. And it is clearly affecting almost all Uighur and
other minority children, whether their parents are in the camps or not.
In April last year, the
county authorities relocated 2,000 children from the surrounding villages into
yet another giant boarding middle school, Yecheng County Number 4.
Yecheng County Middle
Schools 10 and 11
The image above shows a
site being prepared for two new boarding schools in Xinjiang’s southern city of
Yecheng (or Kargilik in Uighur).
Dragging the slider reveals
the pace of construction – the two middle schools, separated by a shared sports
field, are each three times larger than the national average and were built in
little more than a year.
Government propaganda
extols the virtues of boarding schools as helping to “maintain social stability
and peace” with the “school taking the place of the parents.” And Mr Zenz
suggests there is a deeper purpose.
“Boarding schools provide
the ideal context for a sustained cultural re-engineering of minority
societies,” he argues.
Just as with the camps, his
research shows that there is now a concerted drive to all but eliminate the use
of Uighur and other local languages from school premises. Individual school
regulations outline strict, points-based punishments for both students and
teachers if they speak anything other than Chinese while in school.
And this aligns with other
official statements claiming that Xinjiang has already achieved full Chinese
language teaching in all of its schools.
Speaking to the BBC, Xu
Guixiang, a senior official with Xinjiang’s Propaganda Department, denies that
the state is having to care for large numbers of children left parentless as a
result.
“If all family members have
been sent to vocational training then that family must have a severe problem,”
he says, laughing. “I’ve never seen such a case.”
But perhaps the most
significant part of Mr Zenz’s work is his evidence that shows that the children
of detainees are indeed being channelled into the boarding school system in
large numbers.
There are the detailed
forms used by local authorities to log the situations of children with parents
in vocational training or in prison, and to determine whether they need
centralised care.
Mr Zenz found one
government document that details various subsidies available to “needy groups”,
including those families where “both a husband and a wife are in vocational
training”. And a directive issued to education bureaus by the city of Kashgar
that mandates them to look after the needs of students with parents in the
camps as a matter of urgency.
Schools should “strengthen
psychological counselling”, the directive says, and “strengthen students’
thought education”– a phrase that finds echoes in the camps holding their
parents.
It is clear that the effect
of the mass internments on children is now viewed as a significant societal
issue, and that some effort is going into dealing with it, although it is not
something the authorities are keen to publicise.
Some of the relevant government
documents appear to have been deliberately hidden from search engines by using
obscure symbols in place of the term “vocational training”. That said, in some
instances the adult detention camps have kindergartens built close by, and,
when visiting, Chinese state media reporters have extolled their virtues.
These boarding schools,
they say, allow minority children to learn “better life habits” and better
personal hygiene than they would at home. Some children have begun referring to
their teachers as “mummy”.
We telephoned a number of
local Education Bureaus in Xinjiang to try to find out about the official
policy in such cases. Most refused to speak to us, but some gave brief insights
into the system.
We asked one official what
happens to the children of those parents who have been taken to the camps.
“They’re in boarding
schools,” she replied. “We provide accommodation, food and clothes… and we’ve
been told by the senior level that we must look after them well.”
In the hall in Istanbul, as
the stories of broken families come tumbling out, there is raw despair and deep
resentment too.
“Thousands of innocent
children are being separated from their parents and we are giving our
testimonies constantly,” one mother tells me. “Why does the world keep silent
when knowing these facts?”
Back in Xinjiang, the
research shows that all children now find themselves in schools that are
secured with “hard isolation closed management measures.” Many of the schools
bristle with full-coverage surveillance systems, perimeter alarms and 10,000
Volt electric fences, with some school security spending surpassing that of the
camps.
The policy was issued in
early 2017, at a time when the detentions began to be dramatically stepped up.
Was the state, Mr Zenz wonders, seeking to pre-empt any possibility on the part
of Uighur parents to forcibly recover their children?
“I think the evidence for
systematically keeping parents and children apart is a clear indication that
Xinjiang’s government is attempting to raise a new generation cut off from
original roots, religious beliefs and their own language,” he tells me.
“I believe the evidence
points to what we must call cultural genocide.”
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