By Chris Buckley
Sept. 26,
2020
Brushing
aside condemnation from Western powers, China’s leader, Xi Jinping, called his
policies in the ethnically divided region of Xinjiang a “totally correct”
success, and vowed more efforts to imprint Chinese national identity “deep in
the soul” of Uighurs and other largely Muslim minorities.
Photo:
New York Times
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Mr. Xi made
the remarks during a two-day conference that ended Saturday, which is likely to
set the direction of Chinese policy in Xinjiang for years to come. While the
initial official summary of the meeting gave few details, Mr. Xi’s unyielding
words signalled that condemnation from the United States, the European Union
and other powers has not shifted his determination to subdue Xinjiang’s Muslim
minorities through a dual strategy of political indoctrination and state-driven
demographic change.
“Viewed
overall, Xinjiang is enjoying a favourable setting of social stability with the
people living in peace and contentment,” Mr. Xi told the meeting, according to
the summary issued by Xinhua news agency. “The facts have abundantly
demonstrated that our national minority work has been a success.”
Mr. Xi’s
speech was revealed at the end of a week that exposed the stark costs of
China’s security strategy in Xinjiang, as well as continued international ire
over the indoctrination camps and detention sites that have held hundreds of
thousands — and possibly a million or more — Muslim minorities in Xinjiang. But
Mr. Xi gave no signs of markedly softening his policies there.
The Chinese
Communist Party’s strategy in Xinjiang had been proved “totally correct,” Mr.
Xi said, adding that “it must be held to for the long term.”
The
implications of Mr. Xi’s latest comments on Xinjiang may take months, even
years, to become clear. Mr. Xi used a similar meeting in 2014 to demand a much
tougher approach to unrest, resistance and separatist violence in the region.
Ever since
Chinese Communist Party forces took over Xinjiang in 1949, the authorities have
struggled to establish lasting control over the region’s Uighurs, Kazakhs and
other minorities. Their Turkic language and Muslim traditions have set them
apart from China’s Han majority, and many members of these minorities have
resented the expanding presence and power of the Han Chinese majority.
After a
string of attacks and protests by Uighurs, Mr. Xi set policy in Xinjiang on a
more radical course after 2014, leading to the construction of hundreds of
indoctrination camps intended to weaken Uighur and Kazakh adherence to Islam,
and to turn them into loyal citizens who disavow separatism. At the same time,
the Chinese government has tried to uproot hundreds of thousands of Uighurs
from villages and assign them urban and factory jobs, where officials hope they
will earn more and cast aside their traditional lifestyles.
The Chinese
government has kept building detention facilities in the region, including
hulking prisonlike complexes hemmed by high walls, the Australian Strategic
Policy Institute said in a report released on Thursday. Separately, another
report released by the Institute, and a parallel investigation by The New York
Times, found that thousands of mosques, shrines and other Islamic religious
sites have been demolished in Xinjiang since 2017.
In his
published remarks, Mr. Xi did not expressly mention the indoctrination camps,
which Chinese government officials have defended as a friendly vocational
training centres. Even so, Mr. Xi’s broad comments suggested that he wants the
government to continue indoctrination efforts across Xinjiang, even if the
camps play a reduced role in that campaign.
“Incorporate
education about a shared awareness of Chinese nationhood into education for
Xinjiang cadres, youth and children, and society,” Mr. Xi said. “Make a shared
awareness of Chinese nationhood take root deep in the soul.”
A Times
investigation last year cited internal speeches by Mr. Xi in 2014, when he
called for all-out “struggle against terrorism, infiltration and separatism” in
Xinjiang using the “organs of dictatorship,” and showing “absolutely no mercy.”
But it took years for his broad demands to lead to mass detentions into the new
camps.
At his
latest meeting, Mr. Xi’s published remarks sounded less alarmed than he did in
2014, suggesting that his government feels it has a firmer grip on Xinjiang.
The published remarks did not mention terror threats but focused on what he
said were rising incomes of the people of Xinjiang and government spending.
Mr. Xi’s
latest speech appeared to signal that the Chinese government would continue
investing heavily in industrial and urban development in Xinjiang. In a recent
government white paper, Beijing defended labor allocation programs for rural
Uighurs in Xinjiang that many international experts say rely on pressure and
coercion to keep the job recruits in their posts.
But
products from Xinjiang are increasingly shunned by Western companies, worried
that they may be implicated in accusations of using forced labour.
On
Wednesday, the House of Representatives approved legislation that would bar
imports from Xinjiang unless they were proven not to have used forced labour.
The Trump administration has imposed sanctions on officials deemed responsible
for policy in Xinjiang, and imposed restrictions on imports of clothing, hair
products and technological goods from that region.
Original Headline: Brushing Off Criticism,
China’s Xi Calls Policies in Xinjiang ‘Totally Correct’
Source: The New York Times
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-politics/xi-jinping-vowed-imprint-chinese/d/122966
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