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China’s Abuses Against Uighurs Not Going Away: Here’s How You Can Help

By Religious Freedom

LELA GILBERT
ON 3/17/20

A troubling report from the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) was released on Mar. 13, 2020. It accused the People’s Republic of China of using Uighur Muslims (alternatively spelled Uyghur) for what amounts to slave labor in China’s massive textile manufacturing industry.

“The Chinese government has compounded its mistreatment of Uighur and other Muslims by forcing them to work in factories,” said USCIRF Commissioner Gary Bauer. “We urge all American companies, including Amazon, Nike, Apple, and Calvin Klein, to conduct a thorough investigation of their supply chains in China and cease any operations if they cannot definitively rule out the use of forced labor.”

For decades, the Chinese Communist government has been scrutinized for its abuses of religious minorities and dissidents. And for years Christians, Buddhists and Falun Gong practitioners were the best-known and most oppressed victims. But recently, the incarceration of as many as two million Uighur Muslims in the Xinjiang autonomous region of China is under increasing scrutiny by human rights observers and U.S. lawmakers.

Not only are imprisoned victims being used as slave laborers. They are also held by the millions in so-called “re-education” facilities where Cold War-era communist brain-washing takes place night and day. Children are torn away from parents while millions of cameras are equipped with facial recognition software to shadow every movement. Even in their homes, Muslims are spied upon to see whether they observe Ramadan (which is not permitted), recite prayers or refuse to eat pork.

The Chinese regime’s scandalous mistreatment of Uighurs is explained away by authorities as means of preventing terrorism. It is true that there have been separatist movements and violent incidents in the Xinjiang region and elsewhere, perpetrated by jihadis. However the massive incarceration of perhaps two million innocent Muslims, the violent abuses they continue to endure, and the Orwellian hi-tech surveillance and medical testing they are subjected to are the stuff of horror movies.

In Feb. 6, 2019 speech at the Hudson Institute, Arkansas U.S. Senator Tom Cotton, a member of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, recalled the testimony of “a brave Uighur woman” and mother of triplets, Mihrigul Tursun.

“After living abroad for some years, Mihrigul returned to Xinjiang with her three infant children in 2015,” Cotton said. “What awaited her was a nightmare. Almost immediately Mihrigul was separated from her children and detained, seemingly for no reason. When she asked what crime she’d committed, she received a telling reply: ‘You being a Uighur is a crime.’”

Mihrigul went on to describe the conditions in which she was held. She said that nine of her 68 cellmates had died within a span of three months. According to the testimony, they were starved, confined in tight spaces, injected with unknown drugs, and electrocuted—and all the while forced to sing patriotic Chinese songs and repeat slogans like “Long live Xi Jinping,” the Chinese president.

“In other words, they were being brainwashed—a term, I’ll note, that originated with the Chinese Communists during the Korean War,” Cotton said.

At the same time, draconian technology is being used and perfected by China against its perceived enemies. The Chinese government is spending tens of billions on facial recognition, electronic spying, and coercive DNA collection, to create a database capable of tracking a person’s every move, Cotton said.

WE CAN WRITE LETTERS. MAKE PHONE CALLS. COMPOSE REACTIONS AND COMMENTS TO THE EDITORS OF LOCAL AND NATIONAL NEWSPAPERS AND NEWS SITES. AND (WITH CARE TO GET THE FACTS RIGHT) SPREAD THE WORD ON SOCIAL MEDIA.
Chinese Christians – another blacklisted and persecuted people group – are rightly concerned about their own fate as such technology is perfected, and as China’s emerging social credit system is fully functional.

But frightening as that is, and wicked as the government’s intrusions and mistreatment may be, that’s not the worst of it. The forced incarcerations, the violent abuses, the separation of families and the invasive technology are certainly terrible enough. But the reality is that Uighurs are being penned up like livestock. They are being kept healthy and whole, but only because they are being prepared like sacrificial lambs for the slaughter.

The fate of these endangered women and men is best described as being eventual donors for organs-on-demand: when a liver, kidney, corneas or even a set of lungs is requested by a “customer” (often a wealthy westerner), a prisoner of conscience is identified with the appropriate blood type, tissue matching and DNA, and is quickly killed and disemboweled.

It has become clear that the Uighur population has become a primary source of these marketed organs. And, not coincidentally, those camps are also primary site of “disappeared” men and women. These missing victims have reportedly had extensive blood tests, DNA and tissue samples taken. Their medical details were strategically categorized. Then they simply disappeared.

On Mar. 10, The Uyghur Human Rights Project hosted a briefing at the U.S. Capitol Visitor’s Center. They provided several handouts citing evidence of transplant theft including:

· Eyewitness testimony of unexplained “U” shaped scars on young Uyghur men consistent with kidney removal

· Collection of DNA without consent across 100% of the Uyghur population over the age of 12 from 2016.

· Unexplained forced medication in the detention camps.

· Evidence of forced extraction of blood products.

· Non-consenting unexplained medical examinations in detention including whole-body scans, consistent with assessment of extractable organs for transplant.

Even more damning evidence has come from London. According to Forbes, On June 17, 2019, the Independent Tribunal Into Forced Organ Harvesting from Prisoners Of Conscience in China (the China Tribunal) released a 60-page long summary of its Final Judgment. The tribunal was convened by activists in response to worldwide accusations of forced organ harvesting in China.

The report states, “In regard to the Uyghurs the Tribunal had evidence of medical testing on a scale that could allow them, amongst other uses, to become an organ ‘bank.’”

Financially speaking, the profitability of organ transplants is unquestionable. The number of documented organ transplants since 2000 has soared exponentially. Meanwhile, the total of likely voluntary donors can in no way provide sufficient quantities of vital organs, nor can donated organs become available so quickly – within weeks or even days.

The most wide-ranging and accessible report on the subject of China’s organ transplant industry, by Matthew P. Robertson, was presented at the Mar. 10 briefing and is available online. One conclusion was is clear, and judging by the rest of the report – irrefutable:

We have presented the most plausible explanation for China’s organ-sourcing practices, though we would be relieved if a more plausible scenario – that is, one fully able to account for the observed phenomenon, and more parsimonious than any other – were presented. At the same time, if the Chinese authorities had such an explanation, presumably they would have given it by now. In light of a new population of blood-typed political prisoners who are highly vulnerable to organ harvesting, we urge observers to examine the evidence on which our conclusion is based, consider our suggestions for handling the truth-status of the claims, reflect on the ethical justification for doing so, and act.

The obvious response to “and act” is “What can we do?” First and foremost, our lawmakers need to be made aware of this horrendous situation. We can write letters. Make phone calls. Compose reactions and comments to the editors of local and national newspapers and news sites. And (with care to get the facts right) spread the word on social media.

Meanwhile, in these days of COVID-19 and its unprecedented global consequences, it is also timely to encourage our president and political representatives to rewrite our international trade agreements with the People’s Republic of China. It seems to be past time that America brought home the manufacturing of Nike and Calvin Klein products, iPhones and other electronics components, pharmaceutical ingredients and far more.

At the same time, we can encourage our representatives to enact realistic consequences of the recent USCIRF report:

“USCIRF calls upon this administration to use its authority under the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act and the International Religious Freedom Act to impose targeted sanctions on Chinese officials responsible for severe religious freedom violations, especially Chen Quanguo, the current Communist Party Secretary of Xinjiang.”

For the record, if it were up to me, I’d add President Xi Jinping to that list.

West African Christians Face Islamic Terror As US Weighs Troop Withdrawals

By Religious Freedom

A Malian solider stands with U.S. military personnel. Photo by Donald Sparks of the U.S. Africa Command.

LELA GILBERT
ON 2/04/20

Sometimes international news reports bring to mind an apocryphal Chinese curse, “May you live in interesting times.” And yes, we do. In fact, today’s cyber-connected world is faced with more than a few “interesting” conundrums, some of which grow more terrifying and dangerous every day. West Africa is a prime example. West Africans are facing increasingly dire circumstances, many of which comprise issues of life and death.

For those of us who focus on religious freedom, and more specifically, Christian persecution, too much of today’s world seems to be cursed by an evil deluge of anti-Christian abuse, violence and carnage. And as my colleague Nina Shea recently reported, Africa serves as a prime example of “interesting times.”

Thanks to horrifying reports over the holidays and in early 2020, it is all too clear that West Africa’s Christians are suffering extraordinary levels of violence at the hands of radical Islamist killers. In fact, their misery has been going on for years, while their jihadi attackers are nearly unopposed as they sweep through several West African countries. They leave in their wake torched villages, murdered, raped and mutilated victims and bloodstained soil. This is particularly notable in Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger and—of course—Nigeria.

The increasingly worrisome reason that the African lives are so much at risk is because no one—and not even most notably the U.S. government—seems to have a clear strategy for overcoming recurring Islamist invasions. And to make matters worse, now the American government seems to be making plans to leave the region altogether.

There are many arguments about waning U.S. interest in protecting innocents abroad, or more succinctly, “being the policemen of the world.” But in the face of genocidal activity, who will step in? Who will defend unarmed and defenseless Africans? They are experiencing unspeakable violence.

France seems to be the only other nation demonstrating interest and willingness to defend West Africans. But with local terrorist organizations being embraced by seasoned ISIS and al-Qaeda fighters, what will stem the tide? Will France face this burgeoning challenge without U.S. cooperation?

And if the West defaults, will Russia and China step in?

The stories of anti-Christian abuse in Nigeria have drastically accelerated for well over a decade. And the killers are better equipped and more emboldened than ever. Three prominent radical Islamist groups are primarily responsible for many thousands of deaths, kidnappings and mutilations in West Africa: Boko Haram, Fulani Tribesmen, and ISWAP—Islamic State West Africa Province.

Just a year ago I reported eye-witness testimony from Baroness Cox, a life member of Britain’s House of Lords, upon her return from a horrifying investigative visit to Nigeria. In late November 2018, the Baroness’ organization HART released a report on what she learned during her visit, including recording survivors’ testimonies. A few examples:

“They shot Sarah’s husband and children and so she begged them to kill her too, but they refused, saying that they wanted her to cry and bear the pain.” – Deaconess Susan Essam, Jos.

“My sister was raped and her wrists cut off before she was shot through the heart. They took my brother, his wife and all their six children, tied and slaughtered them like animals.” – Margaret, Ngar village.

“They were hacking and killing people, making sure that those that were shot were finished off… They wore red to conceal blood splashes on their clothes as they butchered their victims.” – Lydia, Ningon village.

Those recollections were based on Fulani attacks in 2018.

More recently, on Christmas Day 2019, 11 Nigerian Christians were beheaded during the recent Christmas holidays. ISIS celebrated this “conquest” by releasing a gruesome video of their deaths.

The next day, a young Catholic bride, Martha Bulus, was also beheaded in the Nigerian state of Borno along with her bridesmaids. This took place just five days before Martha’s wedding.

In early January, Pastor Lawan Andimi, a local leader of the Christian Association of Nigeria, was beheaded by Boko Haram after he refused to deny his faith and instead praised God on a video, which his captors produced to announce his abduction and seek ransom money.

Ropvil Daciya Dalep, a Christian biology student, was also executed by Boko Haram in another horrific video. He was shot in the head and the back by a young child—perhaps 8 or 10 years old some observers estimated—trained to kill by the Islamic extremists who recorded the execution.

Meanwhile, Nigeria isn’t the only killing field.

“NOBODY IS LISTENING,” ONE BISHOP SAID AFTER A CHURCH SHOOTING.
Just weeks ago, the National Catholic Register reported the death of more than a dozen Christians in a church shooting.” Bishop Justin Kientega told Aid to the Church in Need, after describing the terrible carnage, “Nobody is listening.”

Christians are certainly a primary target for radicals in West Africa, but U.S. military advisors and the local soldiers they train are also at risk. A few stories have been reported, and more than a few are classified, but the following deserve mention.

In October 2017, four U.S. Special Forces operators were killed in Niger, where they were training local fighters. “Green Berets, Staff Sgt. Dustin Wright, 29, and Staff Sgt. Bryan Black, 35, and an Army support enabler, Staff Sgt. Jeremiah Johnson, 39, were killed fighting in one location near the remote village of Tongo Tongo, after they were surrounded while attempting to withdraw from the fight. Sgt. La David Johnson, 25, was killed later at a second location…”

In May 2019, citing local and security sources, it was reported that, “a patrol of 52 Niger soldiers encountered a group of heavily-armed men at Baley Beri, near Tongo Tongo, leading to heavy fighting, which lasted more than two hours. According to the report, [only] 22 soldiers in three vehicles returned to their base at Ouallam, around 85 km south of Tongo Tongo.”

In January 2020, Al Qaeda’s “Group for Support of Islam and Muslims” (JNIM) in Mali boasted about a string of attacks across the Sahel in recent weeks. In one account, “According to local officials, at least 20 soldiers were killed in that raid, with at least five others wounded. Local residents reported that there were ‘more than 100 attackers’ and that the jihadists were able to capture several vehicles and other equipment at the base before withdrawing.”

Against this discouraging backdrop, On Dec. 24, the New York Times published a startling headline and subhead—”Pentagon Eyes Africa Drawdown as First Step in Global Troop Shift: The deliberations stem from a push to reduce missions battling distant terrorist groups, and to instead refocus on confronting so-called Great Powers like Russia and China.”

For reasons that, at least in part, reflect political disapproval of U.S. President Donald Trump and his worldview, the Washington Post, CNN and several other news outlets have responded with displeasure at the likelihood of U.S. military pullouts from Africa. CNN’s headline declared, “A Trump West Africa pullback would give terrorists free rein.”

Those prominent news sources may or may not be particularly concerned about the plight of Christian communities in vulnerable West African locales. However, their political push-back against President Trump’s plans may, by the grace of God, manage to help the Christians’ cause.

Interesting times, indeed.

China’s people of faith: Canaries in Xi Jinping’s coal mine

By Religious Freedom

A poster with a portrait of Chinese President Xi Jinping is displayed along a street in Shanghai, China, October 24, 2017
(photo credit: ALY SONG/REUTERS)

LELA GILBERT
ON 3/21/20

Call it COVID-19. Or novel coronavirus. Or the now-politically incorrect term “Chinese flu.” But thanks to the virus’s unrivaled global threat, all eyes are now fixed on China and its Communist administration. The world is watching how President Xi Jinping behaves, what he seeks, and what is hidden behind his regime’s fiercely protected public face.
In light of this scrutiny, it wasn’t helpful to Xi’s efforts at damage control when the US Commission on International Religious Freedom declared in an update on March 13 that China was using its persecuted Uighur Muslims as virtual slave laborers.

“The Chinese government has compounded its mistreatment of Uighur and other Muslims by forcing them to work in factories…. We urge all American companies, including Amazon, Nike, Apple and Calvin Klein, to conduct a thorough investigation of their supply chains in China and cease any operations if they cannot definitively rule out the use of forced labor.”
At about the same time, a packed briefing took place in Washington, DC, exposing the Chinese government’s lockdown of millions of Uighurs in concentration camps. Experts presented meticulously documented evidence of “organ harvesting” – providing Uighur organs on demand for transplanted hearts, kidneys, livers and even matched sets of lungs.

The Chinese Communist Party has been able to collectively mistreat Uighur Muslims with ease because many of them live in one region – the Xinjiang autonomous territory. And thanks to satellite images, the concentration camps constructed to house millions of Uighurs are visible from space.  Not so visible or well documented are the regime’s abuses of other religious groups.  Tibetan Buddhists have long endured harsh treatment. Their devotion to the Dalai Lama is perceived as disloyalty to the People’s Republic of China, verging on treason. In response, since 2009, 156 Tibetans have self-immolated in protest of China’s abuses.

Chinese who practice Falun Gong spiritual exercises are subject to arrest, imprisonment and, according to numerous reports, summary execution – also for purposes of organ harvesting.
Even a community of less than 1,000 Jews in Kaifeng has been victimized by party authorities, who in 2018 stormed through a study center’s gates, tore loose and trashed a metal Star of David, and ripped Hebrew scriptural quotations off the walls. The authorities also put a stop to any foreign funding for the group.

But perhaps no religious group is perceived as a more dangerous threat to the regime than China’s enormous Christian population. It is widely reported that there are more Christians in China than Communist Party members – a reality that does not sit well with the party.  And persecution of Christians is nothing new. They have been relentlessly oppressed since Mao Zedong’s Chinese Communist Revolution in 1949.

My first introduction to China’s “suffering church” took place in the mid1980s when I coauthored a book about Pastor Wang Ming Dao, who was locked up in Chinese prisons from 1955 till 1980 for refusing to deny his faith. The stories of his torture, solitary confinement and abuse were crushing. Wang is cherished today as the founding father of China’s underground church. The title of the book was, appropriately, Walking the Hard Road.

AFTER PRESIDENT Richard Nixon’s ice-breaking visit to China in 1972, and thanks to subsequently surging commerce, tourism and Chinese public relations efforts, the world’s attention shifted away from China’s morally bankrupt political policies. Complaints about appalling cruelties were replaced by smiling faces on travel posters.
And across the decades, behind the flimsy facade of tourism and trade, China’s religious persecution continued. Then, in 2018, Xi’s crackdown on all religious believers launched harsher measures than any since Mao’s reign of terror, endangering all who refuse to bow the knee to him and his proclamations.
Today, thanks to an unwelcome and deadly intruder – COVID-19 – the Communist Party’s facade may actually be crumbling. A sickened world is taking a second look at China’s extreme despotism, typified by its policies on religious freedom.

In October 2017, Xi introduced a revolutionary “New Era” for China’s militantly atheistic regime. That was soon followed by an intense crackdown on China’s people of faith, including thousands of shuttered churches. However, Xi’s crackdown wasn’t solely about controlling religious thought.

In reality, China’s people of faith are merely the proverbial canaries in Xi’s vast, dark coal mine.

Any voice, any belief, any declaration that challenges the party’s doctrine or questions Xi’s demands will most certainly be investigated, mocked, contradicted and eventually silenced. The courageous young pro-democracy demonstrators in Hong Kong know this all too well.

And consider the case of Dr. Li Wenliang, the brave whistleblower who warned the world about the dangerous new virus which eventually took his life. He was reprimanded, censured and otherwise disgraced. But his predictions were absolutely correct, and the regime was further discredited.

Perhaps one of the very few good effects that may emerge from today’s pandemic is the overdue exposure of China’s many injustices. Because of its shameful months-long virus cover-up, the lives of thousands, perhaps millions, may well be lost. And for the first time – perhaps ever – the siren song of China’s cheap labor, commercial prospects and financial boons may finally be overshadowed by the exposed malevolence of its leadership.

As for China’s people of faith – and particularly its long-suffering Christians – is the world finally watching? Those of us who admire them from afar recognize that the journey they’ve chosen for themselves follows the same path Pastor Wang Ming Dao took some 70 years ago. And like him, they are walking the hard road.

For Iran’s Imprisoned Christians, Coronavirus is a New Danger

By Religious Freedom

TEHRAN, IRAN – MARCH 25: Irans revolutionary guard volunteer members disinfect the entrance of a hospital on March 25, 2020 in Tehran, Iran. Iran is battling the worst outbreak of coronavirus (COVID-19) in the region and authorities have advised people to stay at home but have not imposed the kinds of lockdowns seen in other countries. MAJID SAEEDI/GETTY IMAGES/GETTY

LELA GILBERT
ON 3/29/20 AT 9:03 PM EDT

“The new coronavirus kills one person every 10 minutes in Iran,” according to Kianush Jahanpur, Iran’s health ministry spokesman tweeted. “Based on our information, every 10 minutes one person dies from the coronavirus and some 50 people become infected with the virus every hour in Iran.” On Tuesday, March 24, the death toll in the Middle East’s worst-affected country climbed to 1,934. More than 24,811 Iranians are currently infected.

No one is more at risk of coronavirus infection than prisoners in Iran. On Mar. 24, Fox News reported that Iran’s theocratic rulers have temporarily released some 85,000 prisoners, including political prisoners, in an effort to prevent the spread of the Middle East’s worst coronavirus outbreak. But they have refused to free many Iranian Christians jailed for practicing their faith.

One woman — Mary Mohammadi — has come to represent the imprisoned persecuted Christians of that Shiite Islamic country, who face vicious treatment and the threat of deadly disease inside Iran’s notoriously filthy and brutal prisons. Their crime? Belief in Jesus Christ.

Most ordinary Iranians live quiet lives, keeping a low profile, wary of drawing unwelcome attention to themselves. And this is especially true of Iran’s Christian converts from Islam. For them, keeping out of sight can be a matter of life and death.

But not all Iranian Christians choose to keep a low profile.

Fatemeh Mohammadi, who now chooses to be called Mary, has been arrested more than once for nothing more than living out her faith and speaking up for Iran’s beleaguered Christian community. Her courage and grace are noteworthy. Even President Donald Trump mentioned her by name during his recent National Prayer Breakfast speech, noting that she was imprisoned because “she converted to Christianity and shared the Gospel with others.”

Until recently, Mary was held in Iran’s infamous Qarchak women’s detention center, a germ-infested facility south of Tehran, where she was ferociously beaten and abused. Before being moved there, she was also mistreated in Iran’s notorious Evin Prison.

On Feb. 28, Mary was released on bail prior to her final sentencing, which was scheduled to take place on Monday, Mar. 2. It was postponed because the presiding judge was diagnosed with COVID-19. And at the time of this writing, Mary Mohammadi’s situation is grave. She is in poor health following her recent prison ordeal. Her sentencing is rescheduled to take place on April 14.

This is not the first time that Mary has faced persecution for her faith. In late 2017, when she was 18, Mary was sentenced to six months in prison for her Christian activities, which the regime characterized as “action against national security” and “propaganda against the system.” As if that weren’t enough, ArticleEighteen.com recently reported:

“Last July, Mary faced fresh criminal charges relating to her ‘improper’ wearing of the hijab. Those charges, which were eventually quashed, were brought against her after she initially went to police to complain of an assault. Then in December, Mary was kicked out of her Tehran university, without explanation, on the eve of her English-language exams. Then just a few weeks later, on 12 January, Mary was arrested as protests took place in Azadi Square.”

That time around, HRANA (a Persian-language news site) related that both male and female guards had beat Mary so badly that her bruises could be seen for three weeks.

Like most dictatorships, Iran permits a handful of government-approved religions to function. But the regime habitually mistreats other faith groups, particularly Baha’is and evangelical Christians. Worst of all is its hateful treatment of converts from Islam to Christianity. Conversion from Islam is a capital offense under Iran’s Islamic law, although it is infrequently enforced.

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