What's new

Male Chinese ‘Relatives’ Assigned to Uyghur Homes Co-sleep With Female ‘Hosts

FedererExpress

FULL MEMBER
Oct 21, 2019
489
0
409
Country
Australia
Location
Australia
Male Han Chinese “relatives” assigned to monitor the homes of Uyghur families in northwest China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR) regularly sleep in the same beds as the wives of men detained in the region’s internment camps, according to sources who have overseen the forced stayovers.

Since late 2017, Muslim—and particularly Uyghur—families in the XUAR have been required to invite officials into their homes and provide them with information about their lives and political views, while hosts are also subjected to political indoctrination.

The “Pair Up and Become Family” program is one of several repressive policies targeting Uyghurs in the region, which have also seen the build out of a vast network of camps, where authorities have held up to 1.5 million Uyghurs and other Muslim ethnic minorities accused of harboring “strong religious views” and “politically incorrect” ideas since April 2017.

RFA’s Uyghur Service recently spoke about the program with a ruling Communist Party cadre in Kashgar (in Chinese, Kashi) prefecture’s Yengisar (Yingjisha) county, who said that 70 to 80 families in the township he oversees have Chinese, mostly male, “relatives” that stay for up to six days at each household—many of which have male family members in detention.

“The ‘relatives’ come to visit us here every two months … they stay with their paired relatives day and night,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“They help [the families] with their ideology, bringing new ideas. They talk to them about life, during which time they develop feelings for one another.”

In addition to working and eating together, over the course of the week that they spend with their Uyghur hosts the officials even sleep in the same bed as family members, the cadre said, particularly during the winter.

“Normally one or two people sleep in one bed, and if the weather is cold, three people sleep together,” he said.

When asked whether any families have spoken out against male officials staying at their homes, particularly in situations where no male family members are present because they have been detained in camps, the cadre said that on the contrary, “they are very keen, and offer them whatever they have.”

“We also try to help them to make proper [sleeping] arrangements,” he said.

Reports suggest that Uyghurs who protest hosting “relatives” as part of the Pair Up and Become Family program, or refuse to take part in study sessions or other activities with the officials in their homes, are subject to additional restrictions or could face detention in the camp system.

According to the cadre, if a household does not have a bed, family members and “relatives” all sleep on the same sleeping platform, with a small amount of space between one another.

“If the width of the room is three meters (10 feet), the platform tends to be approximately two and half meters (eight feet),” he said.

“If everyone can fit, they all sleep there.”

The cadre said he had “never heard” of any situations in which male officials had attempted to take advantage of female members of the households they stayed in, and suggested “it is now considered normal for females to sleep on the same platform with their paired male ‘relatives.’”

The head of a local neighborhood committee in Yengisar county, who also declined to be named, confirmed that male officials regularly sleep in the same beds or sleeping platforms with female members of Uyghur households during their home stays.

“Yes, they all sleep on the same platform,” the committee chief said, adding that it is considered acceptable for “relatives” and hosts to keep a distance of one meter (three feet) between them at night.

No women have complained about the situation of co-sleeping, he said, and local officials have promoted the practice as a means by which to “promote ethnic unity.”

‘Forced assimilation’

According to New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW), in December 2017, authorities greatly expanded the October 2016 Pair Up and Become Family drive—which saw more than 100,000 officials visit mostly Uyghur homes in southern XUAR every two months—to mobilize more than a million cadres to spend a week living in homes, primarily in rural areas.

The “home stay” program was extended in early 2018 and cadres now spend at least five days every two months in the families’ homes, HRW said, adding that “there is no evidence to suggest that families can refuse such visits.”

Activities that take place during visits are documented in reports with accompanying photos—many of which can be found on the social media accounts of participating agencies—and show scenes of “relatives” involved in intimate aspects of domestic life, such as making beds and sleeping together, sharing meals, and feeding and tutoring children. There is no indication the families have consented to posting these images online.

HRW has called the home stays an example of “deeply invasive forced assimilation practices” and said they “not only violate basic rights, but are also likely to foster and deepen resentment in the region.”

Dolkun Isa, the president of the Munich-based World Uyghur Congress exile group, has said the “Pair Up and Become Family” campaign represents the “total annihilation of the safety, security and well-being of family members,” and that the program has “turned Uyghurs’ homes into prisons from which there is no escape.”

In July RFA spoke with a township and a village secretary in Hotan (Hetian) prefecture who both said that when “relatives” stay with their families to teach them the Chinese language and extol the virtues of Beijing’s policies in the region—often for around one week—they bring alcohol and meat that includes pork, and expect family members to consume them, against the principles of “halal” that govern what Muslims can eat and drink.

“We are not so insane as to tell them that we are Muslim, so we cannot eat the things they eat,” the secretary said at the time.

https://www.rfa.org/english/news/uyghur/cosleeping-10312019160528.html
 
Oh, i am not surprised when the source is rfa. They can create thousands of similar stories about China or Vietnam just by sitting comfotably in their office in France
 
Male Han Chinese “relatives” assigned to monitor the homes of Uyghur families in northwest China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR) regularly sleep in the same beds as the wives of men detained in the region’s internment camps, according to sources who have overseen the forced stayovers.

Since late 2017, Muslim—and particularly Uyghur—families in the XUAR have been required to invite officials into their homes and provide them with information about their lives and political views, while hosts are also subjected to political indoctrination.

The “Pair Up and Become Family” program is one of several repressive policies targeting Uyghurs in the region, which have also seen the build out of a vast network of camps, where authorities have held up to 1.5 million Uyghurs and other Muslim ethnic minorities accused of harboring “strong religious views” and “politically incorrect” ideas since April 2017.

RFA’s Uyghur Service recently spoke about the program with a ruling Communist Party cadre in Kashgar (in Chinese, Kashi) prefecture’s Yengisar (Yingjisha) county, who said that 70 to 80 families in the township he oversees have Chinese, mostly male, “relatives” that stay for up to six days at each household—many of which have male family members in detention.

“The ‘relatives’ come to visit us here every two months … they stay with their paired relatives day and night,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“They help [the families] with their ideology, bringing new ideas. They talk to them about life, during which time they develop feelings for one another.”

In addition to working and eating together, over the course of the week that they spend with their Uyghur hosts the officials even sleep in the same bed as family members, the cadre said, particularly during the winter.

“Normally one or two people sleep in one bed, and if the weather is cold, three people sleep together,” he said.

When asked whether any families have spoken out against male officials staying at their homes, particularly in situations where no male family members are present because they have been detained in camps, the cadre said that on the contrary, “they are very keen, and offer them whatever they have.”

“We also try to help them to make proper [sleeping] arrangements,” he said.

Reports suggest that Uyghurs who protest hosting “relatives” as part of the Pair Up and Become Family program, or refuse to take part in study sessions or other activities with the officials in their homes, are subject to additional restrictions or could face detention in the camp system.

According to the cadre, if a household does not have a bed, family members and “relatives” all sleep on the same sleeping platform, with a small amount of space between one another.

“If the width of the room is three meters (10 feet), the platform tends to be approximately two and half meters (eight feet),” he said.

“If everyone can fit, they all sleep there.”

The cadre said he had “never heard” of any situations in which male officials had attempted to take advantage of female members of the households they stayed in, and suggested “it is now considered normal for females to sleep on the same platform with their paired male ‘relatives.’”

The head of a local neighborhood committee in Yengisar county, who also declined to be named, confirmed that male officials regularly sleep in the same beds or sleeping platforms with female members of Uyghur households during their home stays.

“Yes, they all sleep on the same platform,” the committee chief said, adding that it is considered acceptable for “relatives” and hosts to keep a distance of one meter (three feet) between them at night.

No women have complained about the situation of co-sleeping, he said, and local officials have promoted the practice as a means by which to “promote ethnic unity.”

‘Forced assimilation’

According to New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW), in December 2017, authorities greatly expanded the October 2016 Pair Up and Become Family drive—which saw more than 100,000 officials visit mostly Uyghur homes in southern XUAR every two months—to mobilize more than a million cadres to spend a week living in homes, primarily in rural areas.

The “home stay” program was extended in early 2018 and cadres now spend at least five days every two months in the families’ homes, HRW said, adding that “there is no evidence to suggest that families can refuse such visits.”

Activities that take place during visits are documented in reports with accompanying photos—many of which can be found on the social media accounts of participating agencies—and show scenes of “relatives” involved in intimate aspects of domestic life, such as making beds and sleeping together, sharing meals, and feeding and tutoring children. There is no indication the families have consented to posting these images online.

HRW has called the home stays an example of “deeply invasive forced assimilation practices” and said they “not only violate basic rights, but are also likely to foster and deepen resentment in the region.”

Dolkun Isa, the president of the Munich-based World Uyghur Congress exile group, has said the “Pair Up and Become Family” campaign represents the “total annihilation of the safety, security and well-being of family members,” and that the program has “turned Uyghurs’ homes into prisons from which there is no escape.”

In July RFA spoke with a township and a village secretary in Hotan (Hetian) prefecture who both said that when “relatives” stay with their families to teach them the Chinese language and extol the virtues of Beijing’s policies in the region—often for around one week—they bring alcohol and meat that includes pork, and expect family members to consume them, against the principles of “halal” that govern what Muslims can eat and drink.

“We are not so insane as to tell them that we are Muslim, so we cannot eat the things they eat,” the secretary said at the time.

https://www.rfa.org/english/news/uyghur/cosleeping-10312019160528.html
Shame on you because you humiliated your country and people.
Only retard will reference FRA.org as source. It's CIA tool and even worse than propaganda tool, it has zero credibility if not negetive.

Such a stupid propaganda by you and FRA. You should be banned.

@waz @The Eagle
 
This is the complete humiliation of Muslim Uyghurs by the CCP where Uyghur women are FORCED to sleep in the same bed as Han men. To make things worse, Muslims are forced to eat pork. This must not go on anymore. As Pakistan PM Imran Khan said, Muslim countries must not let the market size silence mistreatment of Muslims around the world. India does it with Kashmiris, China does it with Uyghurs. You got to call a spade a spade.

Oh, i am not surprised when the source is rfa. They can create thousands of similar stories about China or Vietnam just by sitting comfotably in their office in France

RFA does great investigative journalism in Communist countries.

Shame on you because you humiliated your country and people.
Only retard will reference FRA.org as source. It's CIA tool and even worse than propaganda tool, it has zero credibility if not negetive.

Such a stupid propaganda by you and FRA. You should be banned.

@waz @The Eagle

RFA is a well respected source and because you don’t like the hard hitting investigative journalism that exposes the plight of Muslims in China, it’s ‘propaganda’ to you. But Global Times, China Daily, CGTN are not Communist propaganda according to our Chinese friends. The hypocrisy is unbelievable.

Radio Free Asia has lost it

China is not used to hard hitting journalism. That’s why there is no freedom of the press in China. CCP are afraid stories like this will come to light.
 
Last edited:
Xinjiang, what a wonderful land!

SEPTEMBER 4, 2019

Over the years, to build Xinjiang into a beautiful and rich homeland for people in the western region, the Chinese government had adopted the most preferential policies.

“Xinjiang, what a wonderful land!” is the name of a famous song that my Uyghur classmates often sang when I was studying in Beijing.


I had been deeply attracted by the beautiful melody with strong characteristics of Islamic nations and longing for the mystery and beauty of Xinjiang.

However, during my five-year study in China, I had never had an appropriate opportunity to take a glance at real Sinkiang. At the same time, the Xinjiang we learned from the media had always been related to words like “violence” and “terror.”

This made me confused and firmed my thoughts to go and know the real Xinjiang myself.

Last March, I was lucky to get to the place I had been longing for. China and Pakistan are neighbours linked by Karakoram Highway built with the aid of China in the last century. Thus, in the hearts of the peoples, the Karakoram Highway has become the friendship highway between Pakistan and China. I am also called, ” Batie” by many Chinese friends here.

When I was in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, I found the infrastructures to be beyond my imagination. The beauty and prosperity of Urumqi attracted tourists from all over the world. There were all elements of an international metropolis.

Having the head of a Chinese company as my guide, who intended to cooperate with me, I paid visits to a few major attractions downtown. “Grand Bazaar,” which I had heard about before, was a must-see trade zone with national characteristics.

There were a wide variety of goods, especially all kinds of snacks and daily necessities with Uyghur ethnic characteristics, which were very similar to Pakistan goods. These goods with ethnic characteristics also attracted people of all nationalities in China and tourists of different skin colours from all over the world. A Uighur friend pointed to rows of beautifully carved copper bottles in a shop and told me, “Our copper bottle is very similar to your Pakistani craftsmanship. Many people can’t tell whether it is made by our Xinjiang craftsmen or produced in Pakistan.”

I was particularly excited that the art and culture of my hometown could also take root in another country. At noon, my friends and I squeezed into a Uighur small restaurant in Urumqi. The restaurant owner treated us with a variety of Xinjiang specialities. When he heard I was from Pakistan, he gave me a thumbs-up happily and enthusiastically called me “Batie.”

When I was in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, I found the infrastructures to be beyond my imagination. The beauty and prosperity of Urumqi attracted tourists from all over the world. There were all elements of an international metropolis

The customers in the restaurant were also infected by the harmonious atmosphere and talked with the owner. I asked the restaurant owner about the living situation. He told me that his economic situation was getting better and better, and the business of his restaurant was very hot. Even his son, who was an ignoramus troublemaker in the past, had also learned techniques and skills at the teaching and training centre, and come back home. His son had become a master of cooking and the backbone of their family. The owner pointed to the Xinjiang speciality pasta on the table and said proudly: “This is his craft. How do you taste it?”

I remembered that when I had been studying in Beijing, I had heard there were much violence and terrorism in Xinjiang. Yet, seeing the scene of various ethnic groups living in harmony, I couldn’t believe this was the reality.

Our Uighur companion told me proudly: “There hasn’t been any terrorism in 30 months. The autonomous regional government has helped us to build vocational and technical training schools for the Uighur people. If you are lacking of knowledge and life skills, you can study in the school. This is also our government’s long-term construction project in Xinjiang.”

I have seen some Western media report on training institutions that teach people living and production skills as violations of human rights. This is totally different from what I saw and heard in Xinjiang. There is an old saying in China that words are but wind, but seeing is believing.

Everything I witnessed with my own eyes, especially the local Uyghur people’s comments on the teaching and training centres, was the most convincing truth. Chinese friends told me that over the years, in order to build Xinjiang into a beautiful and rich homeland for people in the western region, the Chinese government had adopted the most preferential policies for Xinjiang. They had actively carried out vocational skills training, which had gained obvious effects. To unite and stabilise Xinjiang in a long-term construction process had become an important job of governance according to law.

In particular, they had provided working places for the Muslim and helped them acquire skills, thus, significantly increasing the Muslim family’s income. This had provided with a new path for all ethnic groups to live in harmony.

While spending just a few days in Xinjiang, I was particularly touched by the warm reception of my friends from Xinjiang.

Xinjiang is very nice, and the people of Xinjiang are much nicer. On the day I returned to Pakistan, I suddenly recalled the song “Xinjiang, what a wonderful land,” when I was reluctantly bidding farewell to my friends. I had personally experienced the beauty and richness of Xinjiang and fallen in love with this ancient land, which is full of modern vigour simultaneously. If I ever have a chance, I will go there again to enjoy the exotic scenery and visit my enthusiastic Uighur friends.

The writer is a freelancer
https://dailytimes.com.pk/459402/xinjiang-what-a-wonderful-land/
 
Where there's smoke, there's fire.
Not in case of western full scale China bashing campaign, they are just too scared of us and then they lost it.
Did they find WMD in Iraq which killed and displaced millions of people? when they tell lies, they don't need anything.
 
Last edited:
This plastic brother will one day betray Pakistan very badly. And when we realize it will be too late. This is a ruthless, tyrannical nation we have made into our Plastic brother.
 
This plastic brother will one day betray Pakistan very badly. And when we realize it will be too late. This is a ruthless, tyrannical nation we have made into our Plastic brother.
There are no iron or plastic brothers, all countries look after their own interests, no countries are brothers, it's just propaganda.
 
This plastic brother will one day betray Pakistan very badly. And when we realize it will be too late. This is a ruthless, tyrannical nation we have made into our Plastic brother.
Surprise to me there are people who buy this bullshit. No wonder FRA.org get funded by CIA.
 
This is the complete humiliation of Muslim Uyghurs by the CCP where Uyghur women are FORCED to sleep in the same bed as Han men. To make things worse, Muslims are forced to eat pork. This must not go on anymore. As Pakistan PM Imran Khan said, Muslim countries must not let the market size silence mistreatment of Muslims around the world. India does it with Kashmiris, China does it with Uyghurs. You got to call a spade a spade.



RFA does great investigative journalism in Communist countries.



RFA is a well respected source and because you don’t like the hard hitting investigative journalism that exposes the plight of Muslims in China, it’s ‘propaganda’ to you. But Global Times, China Daily, CGTN are not Communist propaganda according to our Chinese friends. The hypocrisy is unbelievable.



China is not used to hard hitting journalism. That’s why there is no freedom of the press in China. CCP are afraid stories like this will come to light.
Only the west want freedom of media and speech. So they can spread lies.
 
This plastic brother will one day betray Pakistan very badly. And when we realize it will be too late. This is a ruthless, tyrannical nation we have made into our Plastic brother.

Radio free Asia also post articles about so called Pakistan abusing Baloch and Pashtuns. So are we going to take all propaganda at its face value? Or are we so stupid to get the motive behind these propagandas? Where is radio free Asia''s whinning about French massacre of Muslims of North Africa? Or even Muslim immigrants in France, or even French Muslims? But obviously if we are so stupid to not differentiate between propaganda and reality then we should be serving as we are right now i.e. a toy for Western and bhartis.

Surprise to me there are people who buy this bullshit. No wonder FRA.org get funded by CIA.
France itself is a fascist regime.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Total: 2, Members: 0, Guests: 2)


Back
Top Bottom