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Chinese ambassador to the US says mass surveillance and oppression of Muslim minority is to make them 'normal persons'

Nov 28, 2018, 17:41 IST

A demonstrator wearing a mask painted with the colours of the flag of East Turkestan and a hand bearing the colours of the Chinese flag attends a protest of supporters of the mostly Muslim Uighur minority and Turkish nationalists to denounce China's treatment of ethnic Uighur Muslims during a deadly riot in July 2009 in Urumqi, in front of the Chinese consulate in Istanbul, on July 5, 2018. - Nearly 200 people died during a series of violent riots that broke out on July 5, 2009 over several days in Urumqi, the capital city of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, in northwestern China, between Uyghurs and Han people.OZAN KOSE/AFP/Getty Images

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  • China's ambassador to the US defended his country's unprecedented crackdown on the Uighurs, its majority-Muslim ethnic minority.
  • Cui Tian kai said the country was "trying to re-educate most of them, trying to turn them into normal persons [who] can go back to normal life."
  • He also said that China would retaliate against any sanctions the US impose on China over the Uighur issue.

China's ambassador to the US has described his country's unprecedented crackdown on its Muslim minority as a measure "to turn them into normal persons."

Authorities have subjected the Uighurs - a majority-Muslim, Turkic ethnic minority populated in western China - to an unprecedented amount of surveillance in their home region, Xinjiang. Uighurs refer to the region as East Turkestan.

Screenshot from footage by Bitter Winter magazine purporting to show the inside of Yingye'er camp in Xinjiang, designed for China's Uighur Muslim minority.Bitter Winter/YouTube

Earlier this year activists accused China of imprisoning up to 1 million Uighurs in detention centers or re-education camps, a characterization China has routinely fought against. Beijing justifies its crackdown against Uighurs as a counterterrorism measure, and called the camps "free vocational training" that make Uighurs' life "colorful."

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Cui Tiankai, the Chinese ambassador, hit back at those accusations again, telling Reuters in an interview published Tuesday: "We are trying to re-educate most of them, trying to turn them into normal persons [who] can go back to normal life."

China's ambassador to the US, Cui Tiankai, in Washington, DC, on November 6, 2018.Jim Bourg/Reuters

The Trump administration is reportedly considering sanctions to target companies and officials over Xinjiang, including Chen Quanguo, the regional Communist Party secretary who is considered the architect of the Uighur crackdown.

Earlier this month, a group of congressmen also introduced a bipartisan bill to pressure the White House into consider banning exports of US technology that could be used to oppress Uighurs and imposing sanctions against human rights offenders.

Read more: China tells Congress to back off after planned legislation looks to sanction Beijing over imprisoning Muslims

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Ethnic Uyghur men talk as they meet at a teahouse on July 1, 2017Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

Cui said China would hit back on any sanctions the US would impose on China over the Uighur issue. He told Reuters: "If such actions are taken, we have to retaliate." He did not say how exactly Beijing would react.

He also likened China's crackdown on the Uighurs to the US fight against the Islamic State terror group.

"Can you imagine [if] some American officials in charge of the fight against ISIS would be sanctioned?" he said.

Read more: China is locking up its Muslim minorities, and pushing Islamophobia to get Europe to do it too

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A police officer checks a Uighur man's ID documents in Kashgar, Xinjiang, in March 2017.Thomas Peter/Reuters

Earlier this week Bitter Winter, an online magazine reporting on human rights in China, published footage from inside a detention center in Yingye'er, western Xinjiang.

The footage shows a series of dorm rooms fitted with double iron doors and tightly secured windows, making the compound look like a conventional prison.

Read more: Shocking footage purportedly shows cells inside prison camp where China oppresses Muslim minority

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