Latest for @dw_chinese (Eng version): Last week, @ASPI_org released a new report in which they found that the birth rate in #Xinjiang dropped dramatically between 2017 and 2019. I talked to the report's author @jleibold about what the results mean: williamyang-35700.medium.com/the-impact-of-…
"I think we are struggling with the fact that China’s regime of censorship over Xinjiang is intensifying. Researchers and journalists no longer have meaningful access to the region and the United Nations has been blocked from conducting their fact-finding missions."
"We need to continue to use what resources are available to us to try to put the pieces of a very complex puzzle together, to try to understand this rather significant shift in the policy that began with the arrival of Chen Quanguo."
"I think we’ve made massive strides over the last couple of years and it’s really an effort of a whole range of journalists, NGOs, academic researchers, and others to look at different aspects of the crackdown."
"When we put all the pieces together, what we are seeing is quite unprecedented in the modern history of China. You have to go back to the Cultural Revolution to see such upheaval like this."
"I still think there is work to be done. There are many things that we still don’t know, but we are hindered in our ability to access the region and documents. Sources that we had in the report have now been deleted as I looked at it this morning.
The efforts of the Chinese government to censor and misinform the public is really intensifying."
The scale of the impact of #Beijing's crackdown on birth rates in #Xinjiang: "I think it has to be put in the context of China’s family planning regime, which has a very long history. There is the belief that the CCP can reshape physical nature as well as human society."
"What we see in the current regime of social re-engineering in Xinjiang fits the wider pattern of efforts by the Chinese Communist Party to reshape China in its own image."
"If we look at the crackdown on birth in Xinjiang, this has occurred in Han regions for several decades and what we see now, the efforts in Xinjiang amongst the indigenous communities out of fear that too many births in Xinjiang lead to instability and ...
... too many births in Southern Xinjiang will increase the size of the Uyghur community that could result in instability and the potential threat to Chinese sovereignty. There is a deep irony here."
"On the one hand, China wants to increase the population out of fear of a demographic crisis but at the same time, it’s cracking down on its indigenous communities in Xinjiang."
"I’ve been trying to get people to understand that this is a much wider pattern of thought and behavior control as well as efforts to fundamentally rethink how ethnic policy operates in China."
"I think we have to continue to try to piece the puzzles together about what’s happening in Xinjiang. We need to keep putting pressure on the Chinese government to alter policies and ...
... we need to ensure that the international community works together with a shared purpose and a shared voice in order to keep that pressure on."
"We also need to remember that China not that long ago had a far more open and lightened approach to ethnic issues as well as many other issues.
Under Deng Xiaoping, Jiang Zhemin, or Hu Jingtao, China was a very different place. It’s possible that we could see a U-turn at some stage."
"What worries me the most is the way in which the whole issue has become so polarized and politicized. It’s almost like there are competing realities on display on Twitter or elsewhere, ...
... where facts seem to no longer matter and where empirically formed research, policy-making, and opinions seem to be not held in the same regard as they used to be."
"I’m first and foremost a researcher and what I try to do is to use the available evidence to work out what I believe is happening. As I said before, it’s becoming harder to get those materials ...
... but even if you do assemble them, people will simply dismiss them. I’m sure that’s what the Chinese government will do with this report."
"At the same time, other parts of the international community will praise the report. It seems like this polarization gets wider by the minute, and I’m not really sure how we can resolve that difference."
"I increasingly see the work that I do as writing the first draft of history. The Xinjiang data project that’s now headed up at ASPI is about documenting so that people will remember what’s happening."
"It’s a collaborative effort and there are a lot of great resources out there. I want to read the available evidence and use the skills that I’ve been able to develop over the last four decades and try to make a contribution in that way."
"I feel like we’ve done that. Whether this will change the Chinese government’s approach or not, I’m frankly quite pessimistic on that front. But we must continue to try."
"There is no doubt that it is having a devastating impact. I think it’s important to remember that the impact of this crackdown will be felt for generations by the Uyghurs. Does this mean the community will not be able to regroup and rebound? That's a complicated discussion."
"Historical memory is a very powerful thing and communities do have a way to adapt and evolve. If the policy continues, we will see a transformation of the Uyghur people into a community that speaks perfect Mandarin, ...
... that is atheistic, that’s modern in the view of the Chinese government, and that lives across China rather than concentrated in one particular area."
"The idea is to transform them into the image of the Han male elite majority. It doesn’t mean there will be no diversity, but at least in the short term, there will still be public performances and sanitized Uyghur song and dance."
"But meaningful identity is surely being eroded. As I said, it could bounce back under certain circumstances and it’s certainly being kept alive in the diaspora community."
Mandarin version of the interview published on @dw_chinese: dw.com/zh/%E4%B8%93%E…
This is link to the original report by @Nrg8000 and Dr. Leibold: aspi.org.au/report/family-…

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More from @WilliamYang120

22 May
Breaking: #Taiwan reported 323 #COVID19 cases. They are researching how to simplify the process of reporting existing cases.
321 are local cases and 2 imported.
There are 400 additional cases. Total is 721 cases in Taiwan today.
Read 17 tweets
22 May
Latest for @dw_chinese (Eng version): #Taiwan has reported more than 100 local #COVID19 cases for a week, and the government tries to contain the outbreak. I talked to @yaneerbaryam about some possible measures that Taiwan could consider: williamyang-35700.medium.com/covid19-outbre…
Taiwan’s Central Epidemic Command Center confirmed that Taiwan reported 312 new local coronavirus cases on Friday, making it the seventh day in a row that Taiwan has recorded more than 100 cases in a single day.
However, the epidemic alert in Taiwan remains at level three, and Taiwan’s Health Minister Chen Shih-Chung stressed that the country is definitely not raising its level of alert to level four, which would mean a total lockdown.
Read 37 tweets
22 May
Meanwhile, more cluster #COVID19 cases have been reported across #Taiwan a week after Taiwan's daily confirmed cases enter three-digit. One of the cluster cases is a group of college students in Taichung who went to karaoke on May 14 without wearing masks. udn.com/news/story/731…
At least 9 people have become confirmed cases in that cluster case so far, including one of the patients' roommate's mother and another college student from a different school who was singing in the room next door.
Meanwhile, the rapid test results show that several firefighters at the Wanhua bureau in Taipei have been positive and they have been quarantined until PCR test results confirm whether they have truly been infected or not. Wanhua is one of the #COVID19 hotspots.
Read 6 tweets
21 May
As #Taiwan's Health Minister pointed out that next week will be a very important moment to see whether the measures adopted by the government have worked or not, Taiwan President @iingwen once again urged citizens not to leave their homes this weekend. udn.com/news/story/665…
Taipei Mayor @KP_Taipei, who used to be a medical doctor for decades, said the rate of positive result at all the rapid testing stations in #Taipei, one of the main hotspots of new cases, have gone from 11% on May 14 to 5.1% on May 20. newtalk.tw/news/view/2021…
Ko said theoretically, the rate of positive result needs to drop to below 3% in order for #Taipei to declare that they have the community transmission under control.
Read 6 tweets
21 May
Additionally, #HongKong government also issued a statement today, asking all contract government workers to pledge allegiance to the Basic Law and SAR government starting July 1 onward. This is the ongoing move to purge the city's government and ...

cna.com.tw/news/acn/20210…
... political system, expanding the pool of people that are required to pledge allegiance in order for them to keep their jobs.
Local media in #HongKong reported that at least 30 pro-democracy district councilors have resigned from their posts, citing the refusal to take the oath which is now required by law as the main reason.
Read 4 tweets
21 May
After three days of silence, #HongKong government issued a statement explaining the decision to close its economic and trade office in #Taiwan, accusing Taiwan of "grossly interfering in #HongKong affairs on repeated occasions" and ... info.gov.hk/gia/general/20…
... created "irretrievable damages to Hong Kong-Taiwan relations." "Most notably, Taiwan has launched the so-called "Hong Kong Aid Project" and unilaterally established the so-called "Taiwan-Hong Kong Office for Exchanges and Services" ...
... under the Taiwan-Hong Kong Economic and Cultural Co-operation Council (THEC), offering assistance to violent protesters and people who tried to shatter Hong Kong's prosperity and stability."
Read 4 tweets

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