They were handed over by an anonymous source to German investigator Adrian Zenz, the first to accuse the Chinese regime in 2018 of having interned more than a million Uyghurs in political re-education centers.
According to El País of Madrid, “the investigation ‘The police archives of Xinjiang’ offers new proof of the magnitude of the persecution of the Uyghur minority through photographs of the interior of re-education centers, police files and speeches by senior officials of the regime communist”. Likewise, he denounces the harshness of the prison system, the existence of child prisoners and orders to “shoot to kill”.
Beijing rejects the accusations, which it calls “the lie of the century”. He affirms that the political reeducation centers are actually “vocational training centers” to deradicalize people tempted by Islamism or separatism after a series of attacks that hit the region.
The regime accuses the Uyghurs – of Muslim faith – of seeking independence through alliances with terrorist organizations.
Tests
Among the leaked documents are more than 2,800 identity photos of detainees, including Zeytunigul Ablehet, a 17-year-old girl detained for listening to a prohibited speech, and 16-year-old Bilal Qasim, allegedly convicted for his relationship with other prisoners.
Anihan Hamit, 73 years old at the time of her arrest, is the oldest on the list.
Another image shows guards armed with batons reducing a chained prisoner.
Written documents prove, for their part, the thesis of a repression ordered by the highest spheres of the Chinese State.
A speech attributed to Police Minister Zhao Kezhi in 2018 says, for example, that President Xi Jinping ordered the expansion of detention centers.
According to Zhao, at least two million inhabitants of southern Xinjiang would be “seriously influenced by the infiltration of extremist thought.”
Minority
The Uyghurs represent about half of the population of Xinjiang (26 million inhabitants).
In a 2017 speech, Chen Quanguo, then the region’s chief, ordered guards to shoot down those who try to escape and to “keep close watch on believers.”
Beijing categorically rejected the conclusions of German researcher Adrian Zenz.
The revelation coincides with Bachelet’s visit, described by the communist regime as an opportunity to “clarify misinformation” about the Uyghur minority.
The high commissioner’s visit began a six-day visit to China, which includes Xinjiang, on Monday. Likewise, with an increase in tension between the United States and China after Joe Biden said that his country is committed to helping Taiwan in the event that Beijing tries to occupy Taiwan militarily (see separate note).
Requirements
The Uyghurs in exile demanded firmness from Bachelet. Nursimangul Abdureshid, a Uighur based in Turkey, commented: “I don’t have much hope that her visit will bring change” and asked the former Chilean president to visit “the victims, like my family, not the scenes prepared by the Chinese government.”
“I hope you can ask the Chinese government about my mother’s whereabouts,” said Jevlan Shirement, a 31-year-old Uyghur exiled in Turkey who has not heard from his mother for four years.
Several NGOs expressed concern that the Chinese authorities prevent Bachelet from carrying out an exhaustive investigation of the alleged violations of rights and the United States expressed concern about the lack of prior guarantees about what she could visit.
Source: Ambito

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