China forces minorities from Xinjiang to work in industries around the country. As it turns out, this includes handling much of the seafood sent to America and Europe.

The labor program is part of a wider agenda to subjugate a historically restive people. China is dominated by the Han ethnic group, but more than half the population of Xinjiang, a landlocked region in northwestern China, is made up of minorities—most of them Uyghur, but some Kyrgyz, Tajik, Kazakh, Hui, or Mongol. Uyghur insurgents revolted throughout the nineteen-nineties, and bombed police stations in 2008 and 2014. In response, China ramped up a broad program of persecution, under which Muslim minorities could be detained for months or years for acts such as reciting a verse of the Quran at a funeral or growing a long beard.

By 2017, the government was collecting DNA samples, fingerprints, iris scans, and blood types from all Xinjiang residents between the ages of twelve and sixty-five, and in recent years it combined these biological records with mass surveillance data sourced from Wi-Fi sniffers, CCTV, and in-person visits. The government has placed millions of Uyghurs in “reëducation” camps and detention facilities, where they have been subjected to torture, beatings, and forced sterilization. The U.S. government has described the country’s actions in Xinjiang as a form of genocide.

Drusas, (edited )

Damnit. I eat so much seafood.

Since June of last year, U.S. Customs and Border Protection has detained more than a billion dollars’ worth of goods connected to Xinjiang, including electronics, clothing, and pharmaceuticals. But, until now, the seafood industry has largely escaped notice. The U.S. imports roughly eighty per cent of its seafood, and China supplies more than any other country. As of 2017, half of the fish that have gone into fish sticks served in American public schools have been processed in China, according to the Genuine Alaska Pollock Producers. But the many handoffs between fishing boats, processing plants, and exporters make it difficult to track the origin of seafood.

Time to sanction these Chinese seafood factories using forced and coerced labor and get slave-made food out of our schools and grocery stores. And no, I don't care if that means I have to pay more.

arymandias,

What is happening to the Uyghur population in China is probably very bad and it should be condemned, but why do these articles always use Adrian Zenz as the main source, a religious fundamentalist nut job. First he was an “expert” on Tibet, and when that went out of the news suddenly he is an “expert” on Uyghurs. He has been caught multiple times for completely making up stuff or overly exaggerating stories, and still the New York Times takes him serious.

Very big weapons-of-mass-destruction vibe.

branchial,

Need to drum up support for more sanctions somehow…

brainrein,

What the USA regulate by $ (respectively the lack of $) is regulated in China by authorities. Which system has the more cruel outcome, I don’t know.

But as with most articles on China I read during the last years I have a feeling that this article’s goal isn’t to teach me about China but to get me prepared for the upcoming war against China. ( No, not the next months but the next years)

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