Hyderabad: For China's 11 million Uighurs (pronounced wee-gers) life is one of travails. Mired in tension, fear, depression - the Turkick speaking Uighurs in China's Xinjiang province remain captive in the hands of Chinese state ideology. They are indoctrinated in Chinese re-education centres, asked to forsake their Islamic beliefs and practices and subjugated.
The Uighurs' original homeland was the heartland of Silk Road. The areas in Central Asia were conquered by China in 1949 and renamed Xinjiang province which means the new frontier in Chinese. Contrary to popular belief Uighurs are not descendants of the Turks.
Things in Xinjiang were relatively peaceful. But 9/11 changed the scene. Many Uighur people openly started to talk about freedom from China and instigated people to die for that, says China. So the Chinese state machinery swung into action. Since then China "destroyed 1,588 violent and terrorist gangs, arrested 12,995 terrorists, seized 2,052 explosive devices, punished 30,645 people for 4,858 illegal religious activities, and confiscated 345,229 copies of illegal religious materials," says New York Times quoting Chinese documents.
China also says that it has arrested almost 13,000 'terrorists' in Xinjiang since 2014. Harsh measures are meted out to some while most are put in re-education centres which the Chinese authorities call vocational training centers. Contrary to China's claims of only 13,000 people taken to centres, a UN panel says that more than one million Uighurs and other Muslims are held in the detention centres. Reliable sources say that Chinese authorities force the detained Uighurs to renounce their religion and culture and brace the Chinese communist philosophy.
However, China rejects any claim that it is maltreating the Uighur detainees. It says it takes “preventive measure to deter people from terrorism and enable them to fit into society.” But a 2018 Amnesty report says that 'open or even private displays of religious and cultural affiliation, including growing a beard, wearing a veil or headscarf, regular prayer, fasting or avoidance of alcohol, or possessing books or articles about Islam or Uighur culture can be considered "extremist" under the regulation'.