Xinjiang internment camps
| Xinjiang internment camps | |
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| Indoctrination camps, labor camps | |
Detainees listening to speeches in a camp in Lop County, Xinjiang, April 2017 | |
| Other names |
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| Location | Xinjiang, China |
| Built by | Chinese Communist Party Government of China |
| Operated by | Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Regional People's Government and the Party Committee |
| Operational | 2017–2019 |
| Number of inmates | Up to 1.8 million (2020 Zenz estimate) Plus ~497,000 minors in special boarding schools (2017 government document estimate) |
| Xinjiang internment camps | |||||||
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| Uyghur name | |||||||
| Uyghur | قايتا تەربىيەلەش لاگېرلىرى | ||||||
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| Xinjiang re-education camps | |||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 再教育营 | ||||||
| Traditional Chinese | 再教育營 | ||||||
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| Vocational Education and Training Centers | |||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 职业技能教育培训中心 | ||||||
| Traditional Chinese | 職業技能教育培訓中心 | ||||||
| Literal meaning | Vocational Skill(s) Education-Training Center(s) | ||||||
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| History of the People's Republic of China |
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| China portal |
| History of Xinjiang |
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| Part of a series on |
| Uyghurs |
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Uyghurs outside of Xinjiang |
| Part of a series on Islam in China |
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| Islam portal • China portal |
The Xinjiang internment camps are internment camps operated by the government of Xinjiang and the Chinese Communist Party Provincial Standing Committee. Human Rights Watch says that they have been used to indoctrinate Uyghurs and other Muslims since 2017 as part of a "Strike Hard Campaign Against Violent Terrorism", a policy announced in 2014 after the May 2014 Ürümqi attack. Xinjiang internment camps have been described as "the most extreme example of China's inhumane policies against Uighurs". They were established as what are officially called vocational education and training centers by the government of the People's Republic of China. According to researcher Adrian Zenz, mass internments peaked in 2018 and have abated somewhat since then, with officials shifting focus towards forced labor programs. Since then, the Chinese government has claimed the centers have been closed. Individuals in the camps have been shifted into the formal penal system, with remaining camps being converted into prisons or factories using forced labor.
The camps were established in 2017 by the administration of CCP general secretary Xi Jinping. Between 2017 and 2021 operations were led by CCP Politburo member and Xinjiang Party secretary Chen Quanguo. The camps are reportedly operated outside the Chinese legal system; many Uyghurs have reportedly been interned without trial and no charges have been levied against them (held in administrative detention). Local authorities are reportedly holding hundreds of thousands of Uyghurs in these camps as well as members of other ethnic minority groups in China, for the stated purpose of countering extremism and terrorism and promoting social integration.
In July 2019, UN ambassadors of 37 countries, predominantly in Africa and Asia, signed a joint letter to the United Nations Human Rights Council defending China's policies in Xinjiang while 22 countries, mostly in North America and Europe, opposed them. 16 countries that defended China's policies in 2019 but did not do so in 2020.
The internment of Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims in the camps constituted the largest-scale arbitrary detention of ethnic and religious minorities since World War II. In 2020, it was estimated that Chinese authorities may have detained up to 1.8 million people, mostly Uyghurs but also including Kazakhs, Kyrgyz and other ethnic Turkic Muslims, Christians, as well as some foreign citizens including Kazakhstanis, in these secretive internment camps located throughout the region. In September 2020, the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) reported in its Xinjiang Data Project that construction of camps continued despite government claims that their function was winding down. There have been comparisons between the Xinjiang camps and the Cultural Revolution.