Whatâs happening in northwest China? Kalbinur Sidik on life under surveillance, internment, and forced labor. 21st-Century Gulag Whatâs happening in northwest China? Kalbinur Sidik on life under surveillance, internment, and forced labor. Ye Jinghan As the United Nations General Assembly convened its annual meeting in New York City this week, a small event on the sidelines provoked anger from Chinaâs UN mission. The event, held on September 19, was a forum to detail human-rights abuses in the Uyghur-majority region of northwestern ChinaâXinjiang Province, as Beijing calls itâand urge world leaders to pressure the Peopleâs Republic to end them. Chinaâs UN delegation warned global diplomats not to attend, saying the event would spread lies and âdisrupt Chinaâs peaceful development.â Meanwhile, more than 1 million people in the Uyghur region have been incarcerated since Beijingâs crackdown against Uyghurs, Kazakhs, and other Muslims in the region started seven years ago. The Chinese Communist Party has constructed a network of prisons, internment camps, and forced-labor camps, subjecting these minorities to forced birth control, abortions, and sterilizationâalong with a campaign to âreeducateâ them away from Islam and their ethnic traditions and identities. What exactly has the Party been doing there? Kalbinur Sidik was a schoolteacher for 28 years in Ãrümqi, the largest city in the Uyghur region. She was imprisoned in early 2017 and forced to teach the Chinese language in two internment camps, where she was forcibly sterilized in 2019. She left China in late 2019, after her daughter, who lives in the Netherlands, campaigned for her release. As Sidik explains, the Chinese government has built an elaborate surveillance regime to track people in the regionâin their homes and throughout their communities. Many whoâve had any contact with the outside world, or whoâve outwardly displayed their Muslim faith, end up in internment camps, where theyâre shackled, unable to clean themselves, poorly fed, and tortured. Those detained between the ages of 18 and 40 are sent on to forced-labor camps. This article is part of a series in partnership with the [Human Rights Foundation](. Sidik will be a speaker at the [Oslo Freedom Forum in New York]( this month. Michael Bluhm: Whatâs day-to-day life like in the Uyghur region? Kalbinur Sidik: I was a teacher. Today, students and teachers still go to school, but Uyghur teachers donât teach anymore. Theyâre not in the classrooms; they do maintenance. Uyghur students are always subjected to change: Their teachers and textbooks change all the time. Even their classmates have changed. Some schools had only Uyghur students before 2017 but now have more and more Han Chinese students. The government has also implemented a boarding policy, meaning parents canât see their children as much as they could before 2017. When you go in or out of a school in the Uyghur region, you have to scan your face. At indoor shopping malls and even outdoor shopping strips, there are facial scanners about every 15 meters. At government buildings, you have to do facial and iris scans. In Ãrümqi, there is a police checkpoint every 500 meters and a larger police station every kilometer or two. People usually donât want to go out when they donât have to work, because they get stopped by the police all the time. They can barely put their ID cards back in their pockets. But if you donât go out, then the security services see that your ID card hasnât been scanned recently, so they come to your home and ask, Why arenât you going out? Advertisement Life goes on, but itâs a different life. Youâre being pushed to go out, and youâre being pushed not to go out. People throughout the region live in intimidation and fear. Every day, they feel as if theyâre just waiting for their turn to be detained. Bluhm: How far does the control of peopleâs day-to-day life in the region go? Sidik: What happened to me in September 2016 is typical. Everyone in the city was asked to submit to a full medical exam, where we had to give a blood sample, have iris scans and facial scans, give a voice sample, and have images of our faces taken from various angles. That year, the government started collecting this information from all Uyghurs. Before then, there was no gate at the apartment building where I lived with my family. People could come and go freely. But now, we all had to scan our faces and eyes before being allowed to enter the building. After the scans, only one person is supposed to go through the gate. One time, another person came in through the gate behind me without doing the scans, so the police came to my home and asked me who that person was, why she was in the building, and so on. On top of our building, there is a huge machine for recording audio. It recognizes the voice samples of everyone who lives in the building. For example, a teenager from the building was in the inner courtyard one day, asking why Uyghurs couldnât wear their traditional hats anymore. He was just hanging out with some other young people from the building, with no adults or police officers around. The next day, he was taken into the police station. The machine on the roof had heard and recorded him. Each home also has a QR code mounted inside. Every time the security service comes in, they scan the code. I asked them what the code was, and they said it had all the information about the household: Who lives there, what we watch on TV, what we talk about, who visits us, and so on. It was all in the QR code. Veit Hammer More from Kalbinur Sidik at The Signal: âPeople are interned for three main reasons. One group is people with connections outside Chinaâanyone who has traveled abroad, has relatives abroad, makes calls abroad, or sends money out of the country. Another group is Muslims: any Muslim women who wear, or even once wore, the hijabâor anyone with a Quran or religious items in their homes, or even religious apps on their phone. The last group is people who have apps such as Facebook, Instagram, or WhatsApp on their phones, because they could be in touch with people outside China. Anyone who speaks out against the government is immediately sentenced to prisonâthey donât even go through the detention camps. People who simply talk about protestsâeven if just at homeâare also sentenced directly to prison.â âThose detained are usually kept in handcuffs and with chains on their legs. The cells have only childrenâs chairs. Thereâs not enough food. There are no beds. Theyâre not allowed to shower. There is no light in the building, so everyone looks pale, weak, and sick. Everyone has a number sewn into their uniform, and they are called by their numbersânever by their name. They are interrogated very frequently, in special basement rooms equipped for torture. There are a few main torture techniques regularly used in these interrogations. People are only released if they are in very bad condition, mentally or physically. Iâve heard of many people who died on their way to the hospital.â âMost people in the forced-labor camps donât even know that what theyâre doing is considered forced labor. Itâs an order from the state. If the state sends you somewhere to work, you have to go. You donât have any choice. Itâs just what the government tells you to do.â [Continue reading]( ⦠and become a memberâfor access to full articles, our full archive, and to support The Signal as we build a new approach to current affairs. 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