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World News See other World News Articles Title: China’s Prisons Swell After Deluge of Arrests Engulfs Muslims Chinas Prisons Swell After Deluge of Arrests Engulfs Muslims Chris Buckley 12 hrs ago a gate in front of a building: A watchtower this spring at a high-security facility near what is believed to be a re-education camp on the outskirts of Hotan, in the Xinjiang region of China. 1/6 SLIDES © Greg Baker/Agence France-Presse Getty Images A watchtower this spring at a high-security facility near what is believed to be a re-education camp on the outskirts of Hotan, in the Xinjiang region of China. The Chinese government has built a vast network of re-education camps and a pervasive system of surveillance to monitor and subdue millions from Muslim minorities in the Xinjiang region. Now China is also turning to an older, harsher method of control: filling prisons in Xinjiang. The region in northwest China has experienced a record surge in arrests, trials and prison sentences in the past two years, according to a New York Times analysis of previously unreported official data. As the Chinese government pursues a strike hard security campaign aimed overwhelmingly at minorities in Xinjiang, the use of prisons is throwing into doubt even Chinas limited protections of defendants rights. Courts in Xinjiang where largely Muslim minorities, including Uighurs and Kazakhs, make up more than half of the population sentenced a total of 230,000 people to prison or other punishments in 2017 and 2018, significantly more than in any other period on record in decades for the region. During 2017 alone, Xinjiang courts sentenced almost 87,000 defendants, 10 times more than the previous year, to prison terms of five years or longer. Arrests increased eightfold; prosecutions fivefold. Experts, rights advocates and exiled Uighur activists say that Chinese officials have swept aside rudimentary protections in their push. The police, prosecutors and judges in the region are working in unison to ram through convictions, serving the Communist Partys campaign to eradicate unrest and convert the largely Muslim minorities into loyalists of the party. Arrests, the critics said, are often based on flimsy or exaggerated charges, and trials are perfunctory, with guilty judgments overwhelmingly likely. Once sentenced, prisoners face potential abuses and hard labor in overcrowded, isolated facilities. Clearly, what were seeing is an amazing jump in numbers, Donald C. Clarke, a professor at the George Washington University Law School who specializes in Chinese law, said in an interview after reviewing the statistics. Its impossible to imagine that even if a judge in Xinjiang wanted to give a fair hearing to a defendant, that such a thing would be possible, said Professor Clarke, who has written about the mass detentions in Xinjiang. If theyre not having mass trials, then what theyre having is, essentially, judges giving blank documents to the police or prosecutors so they can just fill in the blanks. Xinjiang, like other parts of China, does not disclose how many people are in prison, and the regional government did not answer faxed questions about incarceration and the legal statistics. Not all the people imprisoned in Xinjiang are from Muslim minorities, and not all charges are baseless. The wave of arrests, prosecutions and sentences, however, points to an enormous upswell in imprisonment. It also appears unequaled in Chinas recent past, based on official reports going back decades. Its as if the whole population is treated as guilty until proven innocent, said Sean R. Roberts, an anthropologist at George Washington University who studies Uighurs, whose religion, Turkic language and traditions set them apart from Chinas Han majority. These internment camps and prisons are not going away and stand as a warning to the population that they better be more loyal to the party. The rates in Xinjiang, which has 24.5 million residents, far outpace comparable Chinese provinces. By contrast, Inner Mongolia, a northeast region of China that has roughly the same size population, including a large ethnic minority, sentenced 33,000 people last year. Han Chinese residents have been largely spared from the wave of detentions, according to experts as well as data from Han-majority parts of Xinjiang. Arrests and indictments in areas run by the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps a quasi-military administration overseeing areas with an 85 percent Han population rose modestly or remained flat in 2017. Uighurs have generally borne the worst of security campaigns since the late 1990s, Professor Roberts said. It can be assumed that they were targeted inordinately in the arrests that have taken place since 2017. A Uighur student, Buzainafu Abudourexiti, 27, was sentenced to seven years in prison in Xinjiang in 2017. Her husband, Almas Nizamidin, a Uighur who migrated to Australia a decade ago, had been trying to secure a visa for her to join him. He said his wife was convicted of assembling a crowd to disturb public order, calling it a trumped-up offense. Her real offense, he said, seemed to be that she had studied in Egypt for two years, a country that China later deemed off limits to Uighurs. Poster Comment: If the Chinese are building prisons you can bet they will be filled as soon as possible, unlike those cities they have built that remain unpopulated. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: BTP Holdings (#0)
You don't know who to support sometimes. The Chicoms vs. the towelheads -- this is a picture only Charles Addams could draw :-s
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