Uighur researchers say China running more camps than known

This photo taken on May 31, 2019 shows two women decorating a grave in a Uighur graveyard on the outskirts of Hotan in China's northwest Xinjiang region. China has enforced a massive security crackdown in Xinjiang, where more than one million ethnic Uighurs and other mostly Muslim minorities are believed to be held in a network of internment camps that Beijing describes as "vocational education centres" aimed at steering people away from religious extremism.
AFP/Greg Baker

ARLINGTON, United States — Uighur activists said Tuesday they have documented nearly 500 camps and prisons run by China to detain members of the ethnic group, alleging that Beijing could

be holding far more than the commonly cited figure of one million people.

The East Turkistan National Awakening Movement, a Washington-based group that seeks independence for the mostly Muslim region known to China as Xinjiang, gave the geographic coordinates of 182 suspected "concentration camps" where Uighurs are allegedly pressured to renounce their culture.

Researching imagery from Google Earth, the group said it also spotted 209 suspected prisons and 74 suspected labor camps for which it would share details later.

"

In large part these have not

been previously identified, so we could

be talking about far greater numbers

" of people detained, said Kyle

Olbert, the director of operations for the movement.

"

If anything, we

are concerned that there may be more facilities that we

have not been able to identify," he told a news conference in suburban Washington.

Anders Corr, an analyst who formerly worked in US intelligence and who advised the group, said that around 40 percent of the sites had not

been previously reported.

Rights advocates have

generally estimated that China is detaining

more than one million Uighurs and members of other predominantly Muslim Turkic ethnicities.

But Randall Schriver, the top Pentagon official for Asia, said in May that the figure was "likely closer to three million citizens"

-- an extraordinary number in a region of some 20 million people.

Olbert said that archive imagery from alleged camp sites showed consistent patterns

-- steel and concrete construction over the past four years along with security perimeters.

He said that the group tried to verify the nature of each site with on-the-ground accounts but declined to give greater detail, citing the need to protect sources.

'

Like boiling a frog'

Activists and witnesses say China is using torture

to forcibly integrate Uighurs into the Han majority, including pressuring Muslims to give up tenets of their faith such as praying and abstaining from pork and alcohol.

Olbert described China's policy as "genocide by incarceration," fearing that Uighurs would

be held indefinitely.

"It's

like boiling a frog. If they were to kill 10,000 people a day, the world might take notice," he said.

"But if they were just to keep everyone imprisoned and let them die off naturally, perhaps the world might not notice. I think that's what China is banking on," he said.

China has justified its policy after first denying the camps, saying that it is providing vocational training and coaxing Muslims away from extremism. Hundreds died in 2009 riots in Xinjiang's capital Urumqi that largely targeted Han Chinese.

The United States has likened China's treatment of Uighurs to Nazi Germany's concentration camps, but an increasingly strong Beijing has faced limited criticism outside the West.

China last month secured a statement at the United Nations by nations including Russia, Pakistan and Egypt

-- which have all faced criticism of their own records

-- that praised Beijing's "remarkable achievements in

the field of human rights."

The Uighur activist group said it periodically added data including on the destruction of cemeteries in Xinjiang, which

was documented in an investigation last month by AFP using satellite imagery.

The movement said it had unsuccessfully asked the State Department for satellite data

in hopes of improving its information sources.

US lawmakers have also spoken out increasingly on Xinjiang.

In a recent letter, Representative Jim McGovern and Senator Marco Rubio, who

head the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, urged customs authorities to take "aggressive action" to ban imports of goods from Xinjiang made with forced labor.

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