"Like We Were Enemies In a War" China’s Mass Internment, Torture and Persecution of Muslims in Xinji

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METHODOLOGY

This report is a product of field and remote research carried out between October 2019 and May 2021. The report’s findings and conclusions are based on first-hand testimonies that Amnesty International gathered from former detainees of the internment camps and other people who were present in Xinjiang after 2017, as well as from an analysis of satellite imagery and data. The report also draws on testimonial evidence and confidential government documents gathered and analysed by journalists, scholars, and other human rights organizations. One hundred twenty-eight people were interviewed for this report: 55 former detainees of internment camps in Xinjiang (39 men and 16 women), 15 other witnesses who lived in or visited Xinjiang since 2017, and 68 family members of people from Xinjiang who are currently missing or detained. The majority of the interviewees were Kazakh, a minority were Uyghurs, and a small number were Kyrgyz or Han Chinese. The former detainee testimonies represent a significant portion of all public testimonial evidence gathered about the situation inside the internment camps since 2017. Forty-four of the 55 detainees former detainees interviewed for this report had never shared any part of their stories publicly before, and several others had never shared significant portions of their stories. According to the Xinjiang Victims Database – a website run by human rights researchers and activists that aggregates and synthesizes all publicly available testimony related to Xinjiang internment camps – excluding the former detainees interviewed publicly for the first time in this report, fewer than 40 former detainees have ever spoken publicly.1 Many of the interviews done for this report were arranged with the assistance of two human rights organizations based in Kazakhstan. Amnesty informed all interviewees about the nature and purpose of the research and about how the information they provided would be used. Oral consent was obtained from each interviewee before the interview. No incentives were provided to interviewees in exchange for their accounts. Interviews generally lasted between four and 12 hours and were often conducted over the course of multiple days. The vast majority of interviews were conducted using translators fluent in Mandarin Chinese, Uyghur, Kazakh or Kyrgyz; a few were conducted in English and Mandarin Chinese. Interviews were conducted in person in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Turkey and remotely in several other countries in Asia, Europe, and North America. Interviews with former detainees and witnesses were conducted individually. For reasons related to access and the security of the interviewees, no interviews were conducted in Xinjiang either in person or remotely. The government of China threatens, detains, tortures, and forcibly disappears individuals who speak publicly about the human rights situation in Xinjiang. Many former detainees and witnesses are rightly afraid of being identified as having spoken publicly on this issue. As a result, nearly all interviews with former camp detainees and other witnesses were conducted on the condition that Amnesty International refrain from publishing the 1

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See Xinjiang Victims Database, shahit.biz/eng/#filter

“LIKE WE WERE ENEMIES IN A WAR” CHINA’S MASS INTERNMENT, TORTURE AND PERSECUTION OF MUSLIMS IN XINJIANG Amnesty International


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7.2 EVIDENCE OF OTHER SERIOUS VIOLATIONS OF INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW

7min
pages 149-151

6.5 ‘CAMP TO PRISON’

30min
pages 129-141

6.4 ‘CAMP TO LABOUR’

10min
pages 126-128

6.3 TREATMENT OF FORMER CAMP DETAINEES AFTER RELEASE FROM INTERNMENT CAMPS

14min
pages 118-125

5.3 WITNESS ACCOUNTS OF TORTURE AND OTHER ILL-TREATMENT

12min
pages 107-110

6.2 FORMER DETAINEES’ EXPERIENCES OF THE RELEASE PROCESS BEFORE BEING SENT HOME

10min
pages 113-117

5.2 SURVIVOR ACCOUNTS OF TORTURE AND OTHER ILL-TREATMENT

12min
pages 101-106

4.4 HEALTHCARE WITHOUT CONSENT

11min
pages 90-95

5. TORTURE IN INTERNMENT CAMPS

6min
pages 96-97

5.1 TYPES OF TORTURE AND OTHER ILL-TREATMENT IN INTERNMENT CAMPS

6min
pages 98-100

4.3 ‘EDUCATION’ IN INTERNMENT CAMPS

18min
pages 80-89

1.2 CYCLES OF DISCRIMINATION, VIOLENCE, AND REPRESSION FROM THE 1980s TO 2016

20min
pages 19-24

2.3 THE OMNIPRESENT SURVEILLANCE STATE

34min
pages 35-47

3.3 MEDICAL EXAMINATIONS AND BIOMETRIC DATA COLLECTION

9min
pages 59-62

3.2 INTERROGATIONS AT POLICE STATIONS

4min
pages 57-58

4.2 DAILY ROUTINE

17min
pages 69-79

METHODOLOGY

12min
pages 14-17

2.2 WITNESS ACCOUNTS OF RESTRICTIONS ON FREEDOM OF RELIGION AND CULTURAL PRACTICE

17min
pages 27-34

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

21min
pages 7-13
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