A #Uyghur experiencing threats from #China even when he is in the Arctic Circle: "We didn’t send you out there so you could behave like this,” drawls an official in one recording. “You’re forgetting who you are.” theguardian.com/global-develop…
"Four years before, Omer says he was sent by the same handlers to Europe on a secret mission: to infiltrate and spy on Uyghur groups who were drawing attention to the human rights abuses being perpetrated against millions of their community and other ethnic minorities."
"Months before he left, Omer had been detained by the Chinese state after returning from working abroad. He says he was tortured, beaten and interrogated about his connections in Europe before being put through months of grooming, brainwashing and threats."
"Before he left the region, Omer says he was forced to sign a statement admitting he was a terrorist. “Wherever you go, we can use this to show you’re a criminal and bring you back to China,” he says his handlers told him at the airport."
“If you ever start to forget what we told you, just look at the moon. Wherever you can see the moon, we can find you.”
Yet Omer had no intention of becoming a Chinese spy. He went to Istanbul, where he attempted to start a new life, getting married and reuniting with his father. All the while he says he was continually threatened and harassed by his former Chinese handlers.
“We’ll kill you,” he says one agent told his family over a WhatsApp call, shortly after he arrived in Turkey. “You don’t need us to tell you how we do things. We’ll deal with this problem according to our own rules.”
Last year, Omer felt it was too dangerous to stay in Istanbul and left Turkey. He ended up in an asylum camp in this small Norwegian town within the Arctic Circle, near the Russian border.
“I’ve lived my whole life surrounded by people. But here, there’s hardly anyone around. It’s all so different,” he says. “I never dreamed I would end up this far north.”
For those who manage to flee, Norway, with its egalitarian laws and exemplary democracy, seems like the safest place on earth. There are about 2,500 Uyghurs asylum seekers in Norway as asylum seekers. Yet even here, Uyghurs say they are being hunted down.
Oslo-based Uyghur activists say “close to 100%” of Uyghurs in Norway face surveillance, threats and censorship from the Chinese state. This, they say, creates a collective sense of psychological pressure; a constant feeling of being watched.
The surveillance has “a psychological way of crushing your mind”, Omer says. “I felt like I was still in prison. I was scared and paranoid every day.”
Merdan, a 34-year-old Uyghur refugee who says he fled Xinjiang in 2010 after being tortured in Chinese prisons, changed his name to the Norwegian-sounding “Martin Gunnar” on his arrival in the country, in an attempt to avoid detection from the Chinese state.
Yet Merdan refused to be intimidated. He became an activist, filming YouTube videos about the Uyghur human rights crisis from his home and driving around town in an Audi with an unmistakable customised numberplate that says “UYGHUR”.
“When I first got the plate, I drove five or six times past the Chinese embassy. Because I’m not a terrorist, I’m doing nothing wrong,” he says with a laugh.
Then, in 2018, he got a video call. His father was sobbing while filming his mother, whose knees were bandaged.

“If you don’t stop what you’re doing, maybe they will come to further harm her,” Merdan’s father said.
Merdan says he was called again in 2019 and 2020 by Chinese security officers. “They threatened me, suggesting ‘maybe I would get into a car accident’ or ‘thieves might come into my house while I was on night shift’,” he says.
Merdan claims that the officer offered him money, indicating that in return, he would spy on other Uyghurs. Merdan refused. He has now installed multiple surveillance cameras around his house. “Nobody can trust anybody,” he says.
After Muetter Iliqud began writing anonymous articles about the persecution of Uyghurs for a Norwegian website, Chinese police visited the home of her grandmother. “I have no idea how they figured it out,” Iliqud says.
Instead of being silenced, Iliqud, who arrived in Kirkenes at 13 in 2011, stopped using a pseudonym and began publishing under her own name. “I realised there was no sense in being anonymous because they can just find out anyway,” she says.
The harassment of Uyghur asylum seekers in Norway follows a familiar pattern to how other authoritarian states attempt to “eliminate” perceived threats, says Martin Bernsen, an adviser to the Norwegian police security service.
“The Chinese government and the Chinese embassy in Norway have never conducted such action,” an embassy spokesperson said in a statement, adding that it had issued several warnings about ...
... telecom fraud in the name of the Chinese embassy and had reported these to the Norwegian police.
“What you mentioned are totally groundless rumours and lies fabricated by anti-China forces. There is no evidence so far to support any of those accusations,” it said. “In front of indisputable facts, a lie repeated a thousand times will remain a lie.”
At least for Omer, his fear of the Chinese agents’ threats is starting to fade. Here in the Arctic, where the aurora borealis flickers overhead and every sound is muted by snow, he says he feels safer than he has in years.

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More from @WilliamYang120

Mar 19
"Inside #China, the war in #Ukraine 'has ignited enormous disagreements, setting supporters and opponents at polar extremes,' Mr. Hu wrote. His own stance was clear: 'China should not be yoked to Putin and must sever itself from him as soon as it can.'" nytimes.com/2022/03/18/wor…
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Mar 19
EU leaders are in possession of “very reliable evidence” that #China is considering military assistance to #Russia in the #Ukraine war, a senior EU official told POLITICO, threatening potential trade measures if weapons’ deliveries go ahead. google.com.tw/amp/s/www.poli…
It follows a similar warning from U.S. officials earlier this week that the Russian government had asked China for military equipment and other support.
“EU leaders have very reliable evidence that China is considering providing military aid to Russia. All the leaders are very aware of what’s going on,” the senior EU official said on condition of anonymity.
Read 5 tweets
Mar 18
In the readout released by #China, Chinese President Xi Jinping told US President Biden that "national relations cannot go to the extent of war, conflict and confrontation are not in the interest of anyone." news.cn/politics/leade…
Regarding the war in #Ukraine, Xi said the situation in Ukraine has developed to this point, which is something China does not want to see. He said #China has always advocated peace and opposed war, which is a historical and cultural tradition of China.
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Read 27 tweets
Mar 18
By @LiYuan6: "After years of testing and hesitation, #Russia is heading toward harsher internet censorship akin to #China’s Great Firewall to better control its people. China’s information dark age could be Russia’s future." nytimes.com/2022/03/18/bus…
"Nearly all major Western websites are blocked in the country. A generation of Chinese have grown up in a very different information environment from the rest of the world. Mostly, they are left to believe in what Beijing tells them."
“When people ask me how info environment within the Great Firewall is like. I say, ‘Imagine the whole country is one giant QAnon," wrote @Yaqiu on Twitter.
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A very pinpoint and sober interview on #China's role and calculation in the ongoing #Ukraine war between my colleague @rbsw and @BonnieGlaser:
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... strategic partner. China has always valued its relationship with the United States and tried to avoid taking any action that would severely damage its ties with the US. I think Xi Jinping believes that the United States is now implacably hostile towards China."
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Mar 18
China sailed an aircraft carrier through the sensitive #Taiwan Strait on Friday, shadowed by a U.S. destroyer, a source with direct knowledge of the matter said, just hours before the Chinese and U.S. presidents were due to talk. usnews.com/news/world/art….
The source, who was not authorised to speak to the media and spoke on condition of anonymity, told Reuters the carrier Shandong sailed close to the Taiwan-controlled island of Kinmen, which sits directly opposite the Chinese city of Xiamen.
"Around 10:30 a.m. the CV-17 appeared around 30 nautical miles to the southwest of Kinmen, and was photographed by a passenger on a civilian flight," the source said, referring to the Shandong's official service number.
Read 10 tweets

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