What Really Happens in China’s ‘Re-education’ Camps

What does it take to intern half a million members of one ethnic group in just a year? Enormous resources and elaborate organization, but the Chinese authorities aren’t stingy. Vast swathes of the Uighur population in China’s western region of Xinjiang — as well as Kazakhs, Kyrgyz and other ethnic minorities — are being detained to undergo what the state calls “transformation through education.” Many tens of thousands of them have been locked up in new thought-control camps with barbed wire, bombproof surfaces, reinforced doors and guard rooms.

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Former inmates of China’s Muslim ‘reeducation’ camps tell of brainwashing, torture

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New Evidence for China’s Political Re-Education Campaign in Xinjiang