Video game consoles possibly assembled in labour camps
Between 2017 and 2019, the Chinese authorities relocated 80,000 Uyghurs out of Xinjiang to the East of the country. Their forced labour might be used at the factories where hardware is manufactured for Sony, Microsoft and Nintendo.
This is according to the report by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute or ASPI.
The report specifies that the actual figure might be significantly higher than the conservative estimate it provides. Some sources speak of a million people detained in these labour camps.
After the resettlement, people are isolated, subjected to surveillance, their mobility and religious observances are restricted. After hours, detainees are forced to learn Mandarin and undergo ideological training.
ASPI discovered 27 sites like this across nine provinces of China. These factories / camps are part of the supply chain of 82 leading global brands, including Sony, Microsoft, and Nintendo.
One of the labour camps
The Institute calls on the Chinese government to not only eradicate this practice, but also to provide multinational companies with the opportunity to freely check working conditions at local enterprises.
Researchers urged global brands to conduct an immediate audit of all their Chinese enterprises for human rights violations.
The Chinese government refuses to recognize the existence of forced labour camps. It claims that participation in “labour transfer shemes” is voluntary.
Chinese companies and government officials also pride themselves on being able to alter their Uyghur workers’ ideological outlook and transform them into ‘modern’ citizens, who, they say, become ‘more physically attractive’ and learn to ‘take daily showers.’
Uyghurs are a relatively small ethnic group in the northwest of China professing Islam. Xinjiang is home to 11 million Uighurs and 1.6 million Kazakhs. The region is often called the “police state in the state.” Total control here includes video survelance, checking smartphones, donating DNA material and much more.
ASPI research is not the first study on “cultural genocide”. Last fall, a similar report came out from Human Rights Watch .