Up First from NPR - The Sunday Story: Arresting Your Brothers and Sisters

Episode Date: August 25, 2024

In the Xinjiang region of western China, the government has rounded up and detained at least hundreds of thousands of Uyghurs and other Muslim ethnic groups. Many haven't been heard from in years, and... others are still desperately searching for their families. Western governments have called this crackdown a cultural genocide and a possible crime against humanity. NPR Correspondent Emily Feng has been reporting on Uyghurs inside and outside of China for years. In this episode, she profiles two Uyghur men who have found themselves sometimes unwilling actors within the Chinese state's systems of control over Uyghurs. As they work to silence others, they sometimes find themselves silenced as well. Additional Context: Listen to Emily Feng's 2022 reporting, "The Black Gate: A Uyghur Family's Story" part one and part two. For more on the history of the Uyghur people, listen to the episode "Five Fingers Crush The Land" from NPR's Throughline podcast.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 I'm Aisha Roscoe, and this is The Sunday Story. A couple of years ago, we aired two episodes by NPR's international correspondent, Emily Fang. They were about an ethnic Uyghur family struggling to survive a brutal crackdown by the Chinese state. I've experienced unbelievably difficult days. I do not know whether it's a test from God or what. This is Abdullatif Kuchar. In her series, Emily tells the story of how Chinese authorities
Starting point is 00:00:32 detained his wife and his young children. Kuchar spent years trying to get his family back. Since then, Emily has kept reporting on Uyghurs like the Kuchar family, and she joins us today to talk about some of her latest work and the revealing view it gives us into how the Chinese government has been targeting Uyghurs. Emily, thank you for being here today. Thank you so much for having me, Aisha. Emily, you've spent years reporting on the repression and violence Uyghurs experience in China's Xinjiang region. The United Nations has warned that the arbitrary and discriminatory detentions ethnic minorities face there may constitute crimes against humanity. Why is China doing this? It's a great question. And it starts with the fact that Uyghurs make up just under half of Xinjiang's population. They speak their own
Starting point is 00:01:32 language, which is completely different from Mandarin Chinese. And if they're religious, they usually practice Islam. But the Chinese authorities that control the Xinjiang region are mainly ethnic Han, that is China's ethnic majority. And they want to reshape Xinjiang into a region that's more quote unquote Chinese in their eyes. So they've been imprisoning tens of thousands of Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities by saying that they are a national security threat. I would imagine that something like this is not try to report on Uyghur-related issues. But in my reporting, I've had help making contacts through an important source, a Uyghur writer and activist.
Starting point is 00:02:33 My name is Abduweli Ayub. I'm from Kashgar, and I am living in Norway right now. So Abduweli fled China after spending 15 months in prison in Xinjiang for starting a Uyghur language school. He's a very well-known intellectual, which is how I met him. And he has a talent for convincing people who otherwise might be too scared or too suspicious to speak to the media. But even with Abdueli's help, sometimes sources we've been talking to have gone strangely silent. And that led me into what's become this story. It's a kind of meta story about people who work to silence stories, some of whom have felt silenced themselves, and how they help perpetuate and justify systems they know are wrong. We'll be right back. Here at Planet Money, we bring complex economic ideas down to Earth.
Starting point is 00:03:52 We find weird, fun, interesting stories that explain the way money shapes our lives. Inflation, recessions, the price of gas. We've got you. Listen now to the Planet Money podcast from NPR. The Bullseye podcast is, according to one journalist, the, quote, kind of show people listen to in a more perfect world. So make your world more perfect. Every week, Bullseye puts the pop in culture, interviewing brilliant authors, musicians, actors, and novelists to keep you on your pop culture target. Listen to the Bullseye podcast, only from NPR and Maximum Fun. Numbers that explain the economy.
Starting point is 00:04:30 We love them at the Indicator from Planet Money. And on Fridays, we discuss indicators in the news, like job numbers, spending, the cost of food, sometimes all three. So my indicator is about why you might need to bring home more bacon to afford your eggs. I'll be here all week. Wrap up your week and listen to the Indicator podcast about why you might need to bring home more bacon to afford your eggs. I'll be here all week. Wrap up your week and listen to the Indicator podcast from NPR. I'm Aisha Roscoe, and this is a Sunday story. We're back with NPR's Emily Fang and a story about the people helping China purposefully or inadvertently crack down on the Uyghurs.
Starting point is 00:05:11 Emily, you spoke with two men, Uyghurs themselves, who you say silenced other Uyghurs. So where do we start with this? I want to start with a man who's known as a kind of fixer for Uyghurs living in Turkey, where many Uyghurs have relocated. He is a powerful Uyghur businessman rumored to have close ties to Chinese authorities. And people who are desperate for help reconnecting with family and with associates in China, they come to him. He is a man known to make things happen. But he's also rumored to request things in return, like silence. As in, don't speak out against the government and I'll see what I can do. He's tried to silence at least one of my
Starting point is 00:05:52 sources before. So I had to wonder, who is this man? And why does he do what he does? Is he a spy for China? I had lots of questions. And it turns out my contact, the activist Abduwali Ayyub, knows about him. This guy's name, Abduwali told me, is Saber Bagda. Saber is one of the most famous Uyghur around the world. With, Abduwali says, a huge public presence. I have seen him on the screen. I have read articles even about him. And I heard a lot of rumors about him. Rumors about his ability to work with Chinese government officials. Because he is the one that easily get visa from Chinese embassy. This is apparently
Starting point is 00:06:42 one of Saber's magic powers. He's able to obtain visas for Uyghurs hoping to get back into China. Since China's crackdown, it's been almost impossible for Uyghurs to leave China or to return. But Saber floats between these worlds, and he promises others the same opportunity. To save their family members and help them because of he can back and forth between China and Turkey, between Istanbul and Urumqi. One Uyghur guy I talked to
Starting point is 00:07:15 who was having trouble getting his Chinese passport renewed remembers Saber when whipping out his phone, calling a Chinese diplomat and fixing the problem within the week. So that's what we knew about Saber.
Starting point is 00:07:31 But we never met him in person or been able to talk to him. Then last fall, Saber, out of the blue, reached out. So we headed to Istanbul. Turkey is now home to an estimated 50,000 Uyghurs, including many who have fled the crackdown in China. Abdueli met Saber first at his office, and later I met him at an upscale restaurant in Istanbul. Saber is tall, thin, dapper, and very charismatic.
Starting point is 00:08:08 Almost immediately after we sat down, he launched into his backstory. He says he first left China in 1998 and came to Turkey as a student. When I first arrived in Istanbul, Uyghurs were scarce in numbers. But there were plenty of opportunities for Saber. While still a student, he also became an entrepreneur. During that period, I juggled business ventures alongside my college studies, frequently traveling between Central Asia and Turkey. Specifically, I was involved in antler and copper trades, which were thriving industries at the time.
Starting point is 00:08:52 He says he made a ton of money, but his real claim to fame in Istanbul was a Chinese restaurant he opened called the Golden Dragon. golden dragon. Our restaurant has attracted celebrities like Sophia Loren and Jackie Chan, as well as hosted heads of state. If a patron didn't spend at least $50 on food, then we wouldn't even look them in the face. The restaurant also became a hotspot gathering place for Turkish and Chinese government officials. I met several Uyghurs in Turkey who described meeting Sabra there for business and running into Chinese officials. In 2010, Sabra set up a non-profit organization in Istanbul called the Turkish Uyghur Industrialists and Entrepreneurs Association, which promotes Xinjiang, how great it is, and tries to drum up investment in the region.
Starting point is 00:09:51 Just a few weeks after the organization's launch, Saber, as its president, got to meet with the then-Chinese premier, Wen Jiabao, who was in Turkey on a state visit. Sabra says he took the meeting as a chance to press for greater rights for Uyghur people in China. He says he told the premier about the embarrassing interrogations he'd suffered when trying to enter China and emphasized how common this is. All Uyghur people living around the world face the same problem at the Chinese border. It's unfair to treat Uyghurs like this upon entering the country.
Starting point is 00:10:31 Saberz continued traveling to China and meeting with officials, despite the crackdown in Xinjiang. He maintains that open lines of communication with the Chinese state actually helped the Uyghur people. This is a problem, a problem that could be solved through dialogue in a formal manner over many years. It can be addressed through dialogue and negotiation done in the right way. Saber says he does not take sides in this conflict. But he's repeated false claims about Uyghurs on Turkish media. In 2020, he said COVID was the reason Uyghurs were not allowed to leave China or contact their relatives. But he never mentioned the state crackdown. I don't view China as a problematic country. In Turkey, we might see things that are different as normal. China's political structure has its limitations,
Starting point is 00:11:32 and it may resort to aggressive actions for certain issues. I consider this normal. The truth is, it's impossible to really know where Saber stands. Is he trying to help the Uyghur people? Or is he being used as a pawn by the Chinese state? Abduwali says not having those answers creates mistrust. If you do something underlyingly, people feel suspicious and the people will not trust each other. People suspect that, are you working with Chinese government?
Starting point is 00:12:11 Are you working for Chinese government? This does happen. Some Uyghurs have said they're asked by Chinese police officers to spy on other Uyghurs in Turkey. And suspicion is rife among the Uyghur diaspora about potential spies and informants lurking in their midst. For example, right after Wen Jiabao, that Chinese premier, visited Turkey, a second Uyghur businessman told me he received a phone call.
Starting point is 00:12:39 It was from a young, low-level Chinese diplomat who was ethnically Uyghur. And this Chinese diplomat who was ethnically Uyghur. And this Chinese diplomat politely asked the businessman to start a second branch of the organization Sabre began in Istanbul. The Chinese diplomat said they wanted eyes on the ground in every Turkish city. China regularly sets up surveillance operations to monitor diaspora and dissident groups abroad in the U.S. and the United Kingdom, for example. And Turkey is no exception.
Starting point is 00:13:10 This businessman told me, however, that he said no. In his interview with us, Saber hedged when asked about whether he worked with China, whether it spied on Uyghurs, and he even suggested Uyghurs were in part to blame for their predicament. We often place all the blame on China, on various factors, on America, on Turkey, but as Uyghurs, are we completely innocent? And Saber was really skillful in sidestepping every question lobbed at him about whether he's a spy. He does not deny he works with Chinese officials. After all, Chinese state media reports show he's been an official representative at political meetings in Beijing for at least two years and met at least several times with officials from China's United Front. That's
Starting point is 00:14:05 the Communist Party body tasked with co-opting dissident groups outside China. But for Uyghurs desperate to connect with family inside China, Saber is a lifeline, in large part because he has this unusual access. So what are Saber's motivations? To this day, Abduweli and then he helped. But we don't know the motivation. So that secret, the lobbying, is harmful to Uyghur society because you can't tell what you have done to the people. But I don't have evidence to prove this.
Starting point is 00:15:11 I don't believe something without evidence. I reached out to the Chinese government, seeking information on Saber Baghdad and his relationship to China. My questions went unanswered. When I met Saber in Istanbul in October 2023, he was preparing to lead another delegation of Uyghur businessmen from Turkey to China, and dozens of Uyghurs had tried to sign up. Saber had given the Chinese foreign ministry a list of Uyghur men, and Beijing got to handpick the people they wanted to come. Those who were selected were guaranteed safe passage in and out of China.
Starting point is 00:15:55 But there is a cost to going. Spying is too big of a word for what these people do. This is M, another Uyghur businessman who desperately wanted to be included in Sabre's delegation, despite knowing it might mean he'd get approached by Chinese authorities. The Chinese public security and state security bureaus contact Uyghur businessmen and threaten them and ask them to pass on information about the Uyghur people around them, where they live and what they do for work. M left his hometown of Urumqi, that's Xinjiang's capital, in 2015,
Starting point is 00:16:37 after a lot of his friends were detained, which is why M did not want to be named in this story. His family in Xinjiang has come under a lot of state pressure because he now lives abroad. Yet after nearly eight years in Turkey, M still misses China. His life's work was there, including his business. Normal logic dictates we shouldn't have any contact with Chinese people. But we only know how to work with Chinese people.
Starting point is 00:17:10 We have no other options. Turkey is even worse. We've all gone bankrupt working with people here, because we do not know how to work here. We have to keep up contacts with China. Among us Uyghur businessmen, more than 99% of us still have links to China. Which is why M wanted to go on Sabra's trip to China, despite the risk of having to pass on information to the state. Our tragedy is that we have to live.
Starting point is 00:17:44 Survival is our biggest priority. We have families, children. We need to survive. I used to criticize the Uyghur people for not being united against the Chinese. But I learned the hard way that to survive. We have to have contact with China and do bad things. But in the end, M was rejected.
Starting point is 00:18:07 He was not allowed to enter China. He does not know why. And he's reeling. Chinese business partners he's worked with for years have abandoned him because they think they could get in trouble by associating with him. All it takes is one phone call from the local Chinese police. They'll say, don't work with so-and-so person, otherwise it'll bring trouble. All it takes is one call, and the other person will immediately cut ties with you. They can't ask why.
Starting point is 00:18:46 Still, M told me he does not fault Saber and other Uyghurs who keep up a two-way street with Beijing. MENG WEIJIAN, MENG WEIJIAN'S FATHER So many people have fear, fear of losing their families, their businesses being affected. That's the biggest problem right now. In order to survive, they turn their backs on their own people. I heard this again and again during my reporting in Turkey. People do what they do to survive,
Starting point is 00:19:21 and there are no easy black and white moral choices to make. And as for Saber, he never really explained why he'd reached out to us and wanted to talk. But by the end of our meeting with him, it seemed pretty clear he was just trying to justify what he does and how he does it. But justifications like that don't sit well with Abduwali. He's a writer and activist. He's taken a clear stand. Abduwali thinks the Uyghur people are in crisis, and engagement with the Chinese state is a betrayal. People feel that they are on the battlefield at the war.
Starting point is 00:20:03 So at the war, we have only two sides. One attack, another defend themselves. At the time, it's really clear that who is who. If you commute between two sides, it's really obvious. People feel who you are. But one thing that stuck out to me during my years reporting on the ground in Xinjiang was this. There are a lot of Uyghurs in this position. A lot of the low-level staff enforcing China's crackdown are ethnic Uyghurs.
Starting point is 00:20:42 I've always wondered how this Chinese police state in Xinjiang endures. How it continues to keep Uyghurs. I've always wondered how this Chinese police state in Xinjiang endures, how it continues to keep Uyghurs outside China from speaking out, and also how it controls Uyghurs inside China, who comprise just under half of Xinjiang's population. China's success, it turns out, has a lot to do with the help it receives from people like Saber. In a moment, I'll tell you about one of those low-level enforcers. He's a Uyghur man who worked for the Chinese government in Xinjiang.
Starting point is 00:21:14 I knew in my heart that the government's policy was wrong. We'll be right back. From Wondery and Crooked Media with Push Black, this is Empire City. Follow Empire City on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You care about what's happening in the world. Let State of the World from NPR keep you informed. Each day we transport you to a different point on the globe and introduce you to the people living world events. We don't just tell you world news, we take you there. And you can make this journey while you're doing the dishes or driving your car. State of the World podcast from NPR, vital
Starting point is 00:22:11 international stories every day. You care about what's happening in the world. Let State of the World from NPR keep you informed. Each day we transport you to a different point on the globe and introduce you to the people living world events. We don't just tell you world news, we take you there. And you can make this journey while you're doing the dishes or driving your car. State of the World podcast from NPR. Vital international stories every day. This is the Sunday Story. I'm Emily Fang with a story about complicity and China's crackdown on Uyghurs and other Muslim ethnic groups. So in Turkey, we met Saber, a powerful businessman with ties to China. He insists he's helping Uyghurs by keeping good relations with the Chinese authorities.
Starting point is 00:22:58 He has no regrets about working within the system China has established. I met another man who at first sounds a lot like Saber. He was sympathetic to the Chinese government and thought he was helping in the work he was assigned. But over time, he changed his mind. And his story ends in a very different place from Saber's. Abdueli Ayyub first met this man in Istanbul, where the man now lives. We got to know him at a Uyghur-run restaurant in the city. The owners pulled some curtains around us to give us privacy and then served us steaming plates of polo, a kind of rice pilaf beloved by Uyghurs.
Starting point is 00:23:40 You can make an order. But also with dumplings, okay. We're calling this man by his first initial only, A, because he also has family left in China, whose safety he worries about. A tells us it's been a long journey to Turkey. Back in China, he says he trained as a teacher, then got a job in his hometown in the local government. Most of his work was administrative. He registered marriages and divorces, maintained land records and registrations and things like that. But in 2014, A started to notice something different happening. He began to get a lot of new assignments at work and requests to do overtime.
Starting point is 00:24:30 Since mid-2014, working groups were formed. We don't get breaks anymore at work. We can't even ask for one. And part of A's new role was to report Uyghurs who appeared to be practicing Muslims. We were sent out to surveil the Uyghur farmers, for example, to see if there were abnormal situations, such as if they had a beard or not. At the beginning, actually, the government didn't say that they had to get rid of their beards altogether, nor did they tell Uyghurs to take off their long religious robes. They were very soft in their tone, and they said that it was their turn to go to school and bring them from
Starting point is 00:25:26 their home or workplace directly to what are essentially detention camps. These camps were part of a vast system China started rapidly expanding that year. Estimates from the U.S. State Department, the U.N., and investigative journalists show from 2017 to 2021, about 1 million to 3 million Uyghurs were detained. But the truth is, nobody really knows exactly how many were detained or how many camps were built. China euphemistically calls these camps schools because they're where Uyghur adults are sent for months or even years to be re-educated, in China's words, taught correct political thinking and forced to memorize Xi Jinping's speeches. But state procurement documents and satellite images of these camps show the schools have come to resemble correctional facilities
Starting point is 00:26:16 with barbed wire, high walls, and guard towers, and people cannot leave. But at first, A was not too concerned about them. I didn't pay close attention to it, such as who was taken there and how it was done. When I attended the training, there weren't that many people. A thought this was just another round of ideological campaigning. He'd experienced numerous ebbs and flows in how China controls Xinjiang. And he saw it as his duty to his fellow Uyghurs to implement state policy.
Starting point is 00:26:56 Basically, to get whatever this is over with more quickly. And soon, A told us he got assigned a new job teaching at one of the detention camps. The school, as he calls it, was in the chilly northern mountain ranges of Xinjiang, and it had been built quickly, out of once-empty land. It was also run very strictly. Here's how A remembers the routine. Every morning, summertime, around 5 o'clock, wintertime is 5.30, a bell's rung, like bells rung in military camps. After the bell rings, we all stand up, make our beds.
Starting point is 00:27:41 You have 20 minutes to brush your teeth and wash your face and get on the field, where we did military-style drills, such as running in the field. Then we'd shout political slogans. There are a lot of them to be read. We'd do drills of turning left and right and push-ups. Very hard military training. A says he was assigned to help with the studying bit, teaching classes in Mandarin Chinese language,
Starting point is 00:28:08 in Xi Jinping's speeches, and in lessons against religious extremism. At first, he said he did his job with gusto. During the session, I exerted my utmost effort because, in my opinion, terrorism is morally unjustifiable. It is fundamentally wrong to take the lives of others. I was passionate about training them, encouraging them to pay attention to modern science and
Starting point is 00:28:39 technology, democracy and human rights. I emphasize how the bombings and terror attacks in Afghanistan were wrong and harmful to others. When I spoke of democracy and human rights, their hearts were deeply moved. His students were forced to be there, though, remember. They were under pressure to show they'd reformed in some way in order to leave. A few months later, A was reassigned to a second detention camp near the city of Korla in Xinjiang's north. This one built on the grounds of an actual middle school. I wanted to know exactly where both camps were. So he took a break from the interview and I pulled up Google Maps on my phone.
Starting point is 00:29:26 A pointed to where he'd worked. And both camps match exactly to two camps identified and confirmed by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, an Australian think tank. And it was at the second camp that he was assigned to that A says he started doubting the work when he questioned the treatment of the detainees and whether he was complicit in all of it. There was a man in the class, over 60 years old. Unfortunately, his responses were not as quick as the others. This elderly man struggled to write a reflection essay, and when he couldn't keep up he was
Starting point is 00:30:12 subjected to beatings with sticks and slaps by the teachers. It pained me to see an elder treated this way. There were seven or eight others like him who endured similar punishment. While some of them deliberately resisted the system and reacted poorly, he remained a well-behaved man. He would listen attentively, but his slower reactions left him behind. He was subject to harsh beatings several times and my heart ached for him.
Starting point is 00:30:48 On the contrary, he deserved respect. In society or any community, everyone should have shown him respect and greeted him warmly. A says he started trying to help the detainees out. Helping the older residents remember their Chinese,
Starting point is 00:31:07 and sneaking the younger ones extra eggs from his own breakfast because he knew they weren't getting as much food. But he also started to fear for his own safety. He realized the teachers, and not just the students, were being watched closely. At that time, I had a sad feeling in my heart. But despite that, even if we knew what was happening was wrong in our hearts, I couldn't let the government know that I felt that way. We had a boss that watched our every move.
Starting point is 00:31:52 If they found out that we had emotions about what was going on, they would file a report on us. As A told his story, Abduweli and I found it hard to understand how he could justify his work, given what he was seeing. So I asked him why he kept teaching, despite his doubts. I thought that by working diligently, the number of students would decrease and there would be no need for further training in the future.
Starting point is 00:32:22 Unfortunately, the exact opposite occurred. Some of the students I taught relinquished their hidden books and tapes. However, the government still maintained that their camp incarceration action was justified. That was when I experienced the most distress. I believed that through training, they would find liberation and no longer endure such treatment. But the numbers grew to a thousand. And as the detention camps were filling up with Uyghurs,
Starting point is 00:33:02 the economy tanked. With their owners or employees in detention, small businesses around Xinjiang began to fail. Chinese investors started pulling out because of the political instability, and A, who could no longer stand teaching at these camps, tried to find another stable source of income. One of the only jobs left, however, was in the police force. And so in 2019, he says he reluctantly became a police officer in Korla. If I don't work, someone else will take my place. If someone worse than me or less educated than me were hired, they might enforce police work more harshly, leading to further oppression of Uyghur people.
Starting point is 00:33:51 When we met, A showed me his police badge to verify his identity and former occupation. He says his hardest assignment as a police officer, when he's asked to really prove his loyalty, came later in 2019. It was June, the Eid al-Fitr festival, an important holiday on the Muslim calendar. And A is told to go to Kashgar, a city in the south of Xinjiang that's the heart of Uyghur culture. These Chinese state media videos from that day in Kashgar and around Xinjiang show beautiful scenes of Uyghur life in the lead up to the holiday. There are video diaries of young Uyghur men and women preparing for Ramadan. and shots of these long rows of men bowing to prayer outside mosques. A is at one of those mosques too, with about 30 children he's been asked to look after.
Starting point is 00:35:09 At the time of Eid, they tell us, this day is Eid, you should assign Uyghur police, three or four of them from one police station. Go to the mosques on the Eid mornings, we'll tell you what your assignments are when you get there. We bring with us 15 or 20 Uyghur officers to a station and another 15 are Chinese. Half Chinese, half Uighur. They assign three or four of us, mostly young officers, the ones without family. I was also assigned.
Starting point is 00:35:42 We gathered in a hall of a big building in front of the mosque together on the day of Eid. A tells the children he's brought to dance, to put on a show for reporters who are watching. To create this fiction of ethnic unity and that Uyghurs are free to celebrate religious holidays. Chinese state media broadcast videos of the dancing. It seems that there were reporters everywhere. They took pictures and filmed the scene to show that we're living normally. A says it was all staged by the government. Later, we found out that those who came out of the mosque were retired Communist Party cadre
Starting point is 00:36:31 who organized some pro-government party members to pray at the mosque. A sort of laughs in disbelief as he recalls this event for us. We witnessed with our own eyes that the government was propagandizing to the international community that religious rights were being protected here. We requested comment from China's foreign ministry and response, it sent a statement saying Western media is, quote, slandering China's governance policies in Xinjiang. It also said, quote, the legal rights of the Uyghur ethnic group have been fully protected. We're still waiting for comment from the public security ministry. But for A, what he saw at the mosque that day, it was his breaking point.
Starting point is 00:37:27 He does not want to do this work anymore. And he started to look for ways out of Xinjiang. He finds out if you can get a job outside of Xinjiang and you can register your identification card elsewhere, you might be able to apply for a passport and leave China. So he came up with a plan. He had a friend running a school training kids to use computers in the southwestern Chinese city of Chengdu, and his friend agreed to hire him as a teacher in 2020. Once he was outside of Xinjiang,
Starting point is 00:37:57 A says he began to realize what a mental cage it had been working and living there, one he had helped to create. Since A's time in the camps, the security measures in the Xinjiang region appeared to have eased a bit, and China claims the camps have been closed. But recent reports out of the region suggest many of the sites remain, and detentions continue. When he reflects on his time teaching in the detention camps, A says he's struck by how easy it was to get people to turn on one another through fear alone.
Starting point is 00:38:44 We would gather a large number of people and tell them, if you confess, we'll give leniency and let you go. If you don't confess, we will start arresting you in two or three days. Then people would start coming to the station in droves to confess out of fear. And that's all it took for people to panic. There was a feeling that the government knew everything they did. So when a policeman arrested someone and asked him if he had done this or that, we knew he would confess everything he did since birth and give up four, five, or even seven or eight people to save himself.
Starting point is 00:39:25 In 2023, A managed to leave China using his new identity documents. For now, he's in Istanbul, but hopes to settle elsewhere and start a new life. During our interview with A, I kept wondering what Abdueli thought of A's story. After all, Abdueli was jailed by people not unlike A. So I asked Abdueli after we returned from our trip to Turkey what it was like to hear from someone who had been on the other side in the camps. He told me the story just like happened to somewhere else, not our hometown, somebody else, not our hometown.
Starting point is 00:40:08 Somebody else, not us. With detachment, Abdueli means. A had described what had happened to him, but what bothered Abdueli is he had not taken any responsibility for what he had done. Like, I asked him one question that, how can you become a police after you stayed in the camp
Starting point is 00:40:32 as a teacher you have experienced those torture, those humiliation, those indoctrination and how can you become a police and he told me very naturally that, what can I do?
Starting point is 00:40:50 That's the job I can find. I have to feed myself. I have to support my family. It reminded me this indoctrination worked really well. How people accepted the reality that easily. Just confess what you have done. Just tell me it's wrong. I think he does feel bad.
Starting point is 00:41:20 Yeah, of course. Of course he does feel bad. But he told part of the truth, feel bad. Yeah, of course. Of course he does feel bad. But like he told part of the truth but not all of the truth. Do you see this man as a victim himself?
Starting point is 00:41:37 Yes. He's a victim himself because of he didn't realize what he has done is wrong. That's the biggest victimhood. How can you do this? How can you arrest your brothers and sisters? Yes, I can understand as a scholar,
Starting point is 00:42:07 but I can't understand the victim, the Uyghur. I can't. No. But this policeman did come forward. He did tell us his story, finally. I hope that in some way is a way for him to repent.
Starting point is 00:42:34 Yeah, yeah, he did. Yeah, like, he did. Abduwali says that's one step towards telling Uyghur stories to the world. We have enough evidence, but we don't have enough people to tell the truth. That was NPR correspondent Emily Fang, who reported this episode with translation help from Abduweli Ayub. If you'd like to hear our first two stories about the Kuchar family or a detailed history of the Uyghur people from our friends at the ThruLine podcast, we've linked to those episodes in our episode description. Adelina Lansianese produced this episode. It was edited by Jenny Schmidt.
Starting point is 00:43:29 Liana Simstrom is our supervising producer. Our executive producer is Irene Noguchi. Special thanks to Didi Skanky and Vincent Nee of NPR's International Desk. Uyghur translations by Akita Juma. Uyghur Abdullah, Arsalan Hidayet, and Babur Ilchi recorded the voiceovers you heard in this episode. Fact-checking by Will Chase. Mastering by Kwesi Lee.
Starting point is 00:43:55 Thanks to our managing editor of Standards and Practices, Tony Cavan, and to Micah Ratner for legal support. We appreciate hearing from you, so feel free to reach out to us at thesundaystoryatnpr.org. Up First is back tomorrow with all the news you need to start your week. Until then, enjoy the rest of your weekend. Thank you. matters. Join the NPR Politics Podcast every single afternoon to understand the world through political eyes. Listening to the news can feel like a journey, but the 1A Podcast guides you beyond the headlines and cuts through the noise. Listen to 1A, where we celebrate your freedom to listen by getting to the heart of the story together, only from NPR.

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