Database Entry: This Manitoba couple lived in Xinjiang for 10 years. They can no longer stay silent about what they saw
Internment Pretexts for Detention

This Manitoba couple lived in Xinjiang for 10 years. They can no longer stay silent about what they saw

April 21, 2021
Excerpt from this Article Read the Full Article

Then came hushed whispers of people disappearing, being taken to internment camps. The Dycks were the only resident foreigners in the area, and because they were such outsiders, Uyghur friends trusted them with their stories.

“One woman I know had a sister who was taken to a camp because of an international trip she did as a tourist years before. She was the primary caregiver for her elderly parents and sibling’s children. When she was gone, the whole family structure fell apart,” Andrea said.

“We could see one camp from the road we lived on … just 10 minutes down our street.”

The compound was surrounded by walls at least 15 feet high, with security cameras and a single entrance with multiple gates. Razor wire could be seen along the wall surrounding the courtyard.

They estimate that in Turpan’s surrounding farming villages, around a third of farmers were either taken to the camps, or forced to take jobs in other parts of China far away from their families, by mid-2018. Uyghur farmers had made up their customer base for compost sales.



The amount of arrests, Andrea said, caused her teenage son’s friends in Xinjiang to fear turning 18, believing they could be hauled away to a camp for any reason at any time.

Many young men would post photos of themselves smoking or drinking on social media attempting to distance themselves from perceptions about Muslims, she said.

“Just watching those boys be terrified of turning 18 years old was very hard to watch,” Andrea said. “They’re at risk of being taken to camps. And they know it.”