Chinese Official Compares Xinjiang Detention Centers to ‘Boarding School’ and Says They May Be Phased Out
A top Chinese official suggested that the internationally decried internment camps holding up to a million Muslims may eventually be phased out.
Speaking at a session of the annual National People’s Congress in Beijing Tuesday, the head of the Xinjiang government defended the detainment depots and implied they are a temporary arrangement, according to the Guardian.
“In general there will be fewer and fewer students in the centers. If one day our society doesn’t need them, the education and training centers will disappear,” said Shohrat Zakir, the governor of Xinjiang.
China recently acknowledged the existence of its network of camps, but insists the sites are providing vocational training to people deemed at risk of “extremist” thought. The confinement of Uighurs and other Muslim minorities has elicited widespread condemnation, including from a U.S. official this week. Reports from former detainees describe the camps as political re-education centers bent on creating loyal communist..