On March 22, 2021, the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctioned two Chinese government officials—Wang Junzheng, the secretary of the Party Committee of the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps (XPCC), and Chen Mingguo, the director of the Xinjiang Public Security Bureau—in connection with human rights abuses against ethnic minorities in the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region (XUAR). In coordination with the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, and the European Union also imposed sanctions on those individuals along with the entity XPCC, Zhu Hailun—who is the alleged architect of the internment camps—and Wang Mingshan, a secretary to the XUAR political committee. Both men and the XPCC were previously sanctioned by OFAC in July 2020. (Sources: Bloomberg, Reuters, U.S. Department of the Treasury, Guardian, CTV, U.S. Department of the Treasury, BBC News, U.S. Department of the Treasury)
The sanctions come a few days after U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and national security adviser Jake Sullivan met with Chinese State Councilor Wang Yi and the foreign affairs chief of the Chinese Communist Party, Yang Jiechi, in Anchorage, Alaska on March 18, 2021. The highly anticipated two-day talks were expected to address trade and human rights violations in Tibet, Hong Kong, and the XUAR. Despite a heated exchange, the United States and China did not establish a clear path on next steps regarding tariffs and human rights in Xinjiang and Hong Kong. The U.S. Department of State announced their endorsement of the Trump administration’s January 19, 2021 genocide charge against the People’s Republic of China on March 9, and on March 11, the Biden Administration further confirmed the assessment in a press briefing. Among the crimes are China’s use of internment camps, indoctrination programs, and forced sterilization on predominantly Muslim ethnic minorities, including the Kazakhs and Kyrgyz, since at least March 2017. (Sources: Associated Press, U.S. Department of State, New York Times, CNN, Reuters, White House, Bloomberg Law, Financial Times)
Beginning in April 2017, China implemented broad campaigns in the XUAR under the guise of countering extremism. Although claiming terrorism concerns, the government’s “re-education” programs, broad definitions of “terrorism” and “extremism” and its unclear definition of “fake terrorism information” continued to raise human rights concerns as over one million ethnic minorities were arbitrarily detained in internment camps throughout the region from July 2017 to July 2019. Following international condemnation of the XUAR internment camps, on July 30, 2019, Chinese officials claimed that they released the majority of the detainees despite not offering convincing evidence of mass releases. It is reported that people who had been freed effectively remained in captivity as many were forced into labor programs instead. (Sources: U.S. Department of State, New York Times)
On February 18, 2020, the Associated Press released a database detailing that the Chinese government focused on religion, rather than political extremism, as a reason for detention. Accordingly, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic—during which China locked down borders, expelled foreign journalists who reported on XUAR and censored information across websites in the region—it was also revealed that China has been using Uighur labor to produce personal protective equipment on a global scale. Around 17 out of 51 companies in the XUAR participate in the labor program. (Sources: Associated Press, National Review, Washington Post)
Overview
Transnational extremist groups like al-Qaeda did not target China, nor did they develop strong links with domestic Chinese Muslim terrorist organizations in its western regions. However, extremists’ disregard of China is receding as China emerges from relative isolationism to global engagement, projecting presence and power in historically off-limits regions like the Middle East and North Africa. Islamic extremist groups see China’s burgeoning presence in Arab regions as a particularly serious offense and some have labeled China as the new “head of the snake.” ISIS, for instance, has cited China as a legitimate target of attack, although China has declined to join the U.S.-led coalition against the terror group. (Sources: Security Studies Quarterly, CNN)
Internally, China’s northwest province of Xinjiang is home to 10 million Muslim Uighurs, an ethnically non-Han Turkic people. According to China expert Philip Potter, the Chinese authorities’ “ongoing security crackdown in Xinjiang has forced the most militant Uighur separatists into volatile neighboring countries, such as Pakistan, where they are forging strategic alliances with, and even leading, jihadist factions affiliated with al-Qaeda and the Taliban.” The resulting “cross-fertilization” is likely to “substantially increase the sophistication and lethality of terrorism in China.” As of December 2014, around 300 Chinese nationals have joined ISIS, according to China’s state-run newspaper Global Times. In May 2017, the Syrian ambassador to China claimed that approximately 5,000 Uighurs from Xinjiang were fighting in Syria, with some fighting for ISIS while the majority fought under “their own banner.” (Sources: Asia Times, Security Studies Quarterly, Reuters, Reuters)
In 2014, China saw an increase in terrorist activity. Attacks were no longer limited to China’s western region which resulted in heightened counterterrorism measures throughout the rest of the country. One attack outside of the western region occurred on March 1, 2014, when ten men armed with knives stormed the railway station in the southern city of Kunming. At least 31 people were killed and over 141 people were injured. A separatist group from Xinjiang claimed responsibility for the attack. As a result, China tightened its security in the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region (XUAR) to prevent additional domestic acts of terrorism. In particular, greater government control was exercised over religious expression and practice. (Sources: CNN, BBC News, U.S. Department of State)
The main target of China’s counterterrorism efforts is the East Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM), a terrorist organization that Beijing alleges maintains influence in Xinjiang. Since Xinjiang is home to over 11 million Uighurs, the Uighur community has come under great scrutiny. Although members of the Uighur community did travel to Syria to join the insurgency against Assad, many under the banner of an organization called the Turkestan Islamic Party, which is generally regarded as an offshoot of the ETIM. (Source: Huffington Post)
In November 2015, ISIS published images of executed Chinese hostage Fan Jinghui, under the title “The Fate of the Two Prisoners” in their magazine, Dabiq. This represented the first known instance in which a Chinese citizen was killed by ISIS. President Xi Jinping claimed China would “certainly bring the criminals to justice.” However, in the wake of Fan Jinghui’s execution, NPR described China’s overall response as “muted,” and China remains outside “anti-ISIS operations in the Middle East.” (Sources: Clarion Project, International Business Times, National Public Radio)
In December 2015, the ISIS foreign-language media arm Al Hayat published a Mandarin-language nasheed exhorting Muslims in China to “wake up” and “take up weapons.” The step appears to represent an effort to step up recruitment among Chinese Islamists, and “could be aimed at placing China in the cross hairs,” according to a report in the New York Times. (Source: New York Times, CNBC)
On December 28, 2016, after a year of relative calm in China, four men drove a vehicle into the premises of a government building in Karakax county, Xinjiang. The attackers, described as Islamist militants by Chinese state media, detonated an explosive and killed one person, before being shot and killed by police. Weeks before the attack, China’s head of religious affairs warned that extremist thought was now penetrating central China, in “inland provincial areas” beyond Xinjiang and the western region. (Sources: Reuters, Independent, Reuters)
Radicalization and Foreign Fighters
Homegrown Radicalization
Since the late 1980s, China’s northwest Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region (XUAR) has been plagued by violence stemming from separatist movements and religious fundamentalism. Xinjiang is home to a plurality of ethnically Turkic Muslim Uighurs who follow a moderate version of Sunni Islam. Many Uighurs reject the name and idea of Xinjiang, and some seek to create an independent “East Turkestan” to replace the present-day Xinjiang. Chinese authorities claim that extremist religious ideology, often promulgated over the Internet, has corrupted the Uighurs in Xinjiang, prompting many to pursue separatism through terrorist means. Extremist secessionist and religious groups in Xinjiang have been described as splintering, merging, and collapsing. (Source: Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies)
The East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM) is China’s most prominent extremist group. Formed in the 1990s, ETIM is widely regarded as the most active and well-organized terrorist organization operating in Xinjiang. It seeks to create an independent Islamist state covering parts of China and Central Asia. While ETIM has claimed responsibility for a handful of attacks within China, it is best known for its anti-Chinese and anti-American online propaganda. In the past few years, ETIM has begun referring to itself as the Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP) and the Eastern Turkistan Islamic Party (ETIP). (Sources: Council on Foreign Relations, BBC News, Reuters, BBC News, Washington Post, Associated Press, Security Studies Quarterly, APCSS, Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst)
Throughout the 1990s, the Chinese government attempted to publicly link ETIM to al-Qaeda, citing funding and training links. In December 2003, China designated ETIM as a terrorist group. The U.S. Department of State designated ETIM as a terrorist organization on September 3, 2002, and the U.S. Treasury Department also designated the Islamist extremists on the same day. The U.N. Security Council followed suit and sanctioned the group on September 11, 2002 for being associated with al-Qaeda. On October 20, 2020, then-U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo ordered the delisting of ETIM as a terrorist organization. According to the State Department, there had not been credible evidence in more than a decade that ETIM continued to operate in China. Beijing rejected the decision, claiming that the Uighur group had a history of violence and remained a threat to China’s national security. As of March 2021, the group has yet to be delisted by the United Nations. (Sources: Security Studies Quarterly, BBC News, U.S. Department of State, U.S. Department of the Treasury, U.S. Department of the Treasury, Associated Press, Wall Street Journal, United Nations)
Foreign Fighters
In December 2014, the Chinese state-run newspaper Global Times wrote that “around 300 Chinese extremists are fighting with ISIS in Iraq and Syria,” and alleged that most of the foreign fighters are affiliated with the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), also known as the Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP). According to a Voice of America report, the TIP has been one of the major extremist groups operating in Syria since the start of the country’s civil war and is primarily made up of Uighur Muslims from the restive Xinjiang province of China. According to the Newlines Institute, despite ISIS’s territorial setbacks, as of March 2020, TIP still remains influential in northwest Syria due to a combination of military skill, local goodwill and effective relationship management that has prevented infighting within the group. Many of those who have fled Xinjiang, have reportedly traveled to Turkey, a country with which the Turkic-speaking Uighurs share cultural and religious ties. For some, Turkey has served as a transit route to eventually join with Islamist militant groups in Syria and Iraq. This has led to calls from Beijing for enhanced cooperation between China and Turkey. (Sources: Al Arabiya, Reuters, Reuters, Voice of America, Newlines Institute)
In May 2017, Syria’s ambassador to China, Imad Moustapha, reported that up to 5,000 Uighurs from the northwest region of Xinjiang were fighting in Syria. Moustapha told Reuters that some of the Uighur fighters were ISIS members, but most were fighting in the country to promote a separatist cause “under their own banner.” Accordingly, Uighurs affiliated with al-Qaeda’s network are said to be in the thousands, including their wives and children. An independent media resource, The Levant, estimates 2,000 to 2,500 Uighurs fighting under the Nusra Front. The number of “trained jihadist fighters” intercepted trying to re-enter China rose dramatically in 2018, posing a growing challenge for the country, according to Chinese government security and diplomatic advisers. The sources did not specify total numbers but said the increase reflected a higher threat, particularly to China’s western region of Xinjiang. However, re-entry to China has proven difficult as officials at al-Hol displacement camp in northeast Syria claimed that some detainees, who are allegedly Chinese nationals, do not have documents proving their nationality. (Sources: Reuters, War on the Rocks, South China Morning Post, Newlines Institute)
In December 2016, as part of new statewide counterterrorism measures, Xinjiang’s People’s Congress strengthened rules on border crossings into adjacent countries. The Xinjiang region shares borders with the Central Asian states of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, and the Pakistani-administered section of Kashmir and Jammu. (Source: U.S. State Department)
In January 2015, Chinese authorities arrested 10 Turkish nationals in Shanghai for allegedly helping ethnic Uighurs leave China to fight alongside Islamist militants in Syria, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. The police also arrested nine Uighurs from Xinjiang and two Chinese citizens who were helping with the illegal immigration scheme. (Sources: Reuters, The Diplomat)
In December 2014, ISIS militants beheaded two Chinese members after charging them with treason and accusing them of attempted escape.
In December 2014, ISIS militants beheaded two Chinese members after charging them with treason and accusing them of attempted escape. In September 2014, a Chinese citizen fighting with ISIS in Syria was “arrested, tried and shot dead” by ISIS militants after he became disillusioned with the group and attempted to flee to Turkey. In November 2014, nine Xinjiang terror suspects were detained for attempting to leave China after paying up to 60,000 Yuan ($9,700) for altered Turkish passports. (Sources: Reuters, Reuters, The Diplomat)
Soon after the September 11, 2001, attacks against the United States, Chinese authorities reported that over one thousand Xinjiang separatists traveled to terrorist training camps in Afghanistan. In 2002, the Chinese government claimed to have arrested 100 foreign-trained fighters that had returned to Xinjiang. (Source: Council on Foreign Relations)
Major Extremist and Terrorist Incidents
China has suffered an increasing number of violent extremist incidents since the 1980s, most of which have been reportedly carried out by ethnic Uighurs within the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region (XUAR). However, details regarding terrorism-related attacks have been difficult to verify given China’s lack of transparency and censoring of information available to U.S. and other international officials. Accordingly, Chinese officials claim the country has not seen violent terrorist incidents due to the government’s “new counter-extremism policies” which U.S. State Department officials consider to be an attempt justify the repressive policies in XUAR. (Sources: Security Studies Quarterly, U.S. Department of State)
The state-led Chinese media accuse ETIM/TIP or associated jihadists of carrying out violence, although independent verification of these claims is not available. According to the U.S. Department of State, China has “restricted the ability of journalists and international observers to independently verify official media accounts.” Human rights organizations maintain that China uses counterterrorism as a pretext to suppress Uighurs. (Sources: Human Rights Watch, U.S. Department of State, U.S. Department of State, Security Studies Quarterly)
Domestic Counter-Extremism
In October 2014, China’s National People’s Congress drafted legislation that would establish a national anti-terrorism intelligence system, which would improve intelligence gathering and sharing. The state-controlled Xinhua News Agency said the draft law would increase Internet controls and tighten security measures regarding the transport of dangerous materials and border controls. According to the Xinhua report, anyone found guilty of “promoting terrorism and extremism by producing and distributing related materials, releasing information, instructing in person or through audio, video or information networks” may face more than five years in prison. The law—entitled the “Counter-Terrorism Law”—was passed on July 1, 2015. A top priority of the law is to set up counterterrorism working bodies in the national, provincial, and prefecture-level governments and to emphasize prevention as a counterterrorism strategy. However, a major issue raised by the draft law involved the definition of terrorism which is defined as “any advocacy or activity that, by means of violence, sabotage, or threat, aims to create social panic, undermine public security, or menace a state organ or an international organization.” In this case, the vague terminology provides the government the ability to arbitrarily label any dissension as terrorism. (Sources: Reuters, Refworld)
In December 2015, China passed a new anti-terrorism law that allows the Chinese military to conduct counterterrorism operations in other countries. The law was criticized by western governments and businesses. Notably, then-U.S. President Barack Obama expressed concern that telecom companies would be forced to provide the Chinese government with “back door” access to their products, encryption codes, and sensitive technology. (Source: Financial Times, Reuters)
Human rights advocates expressed skepticism about the draft law, claiming they will “[legitimize] ongoing human rights violations and facilitate future abuses…[in a region with] a history of gross human rights abuses committed in the name of counter terrorism.” While acknowledging the Chinese government’s duty to prevent “appalling attacks” perpetrated by extremists, Human Rights Watch proposes radical revisions to the new laws to ensure conformity with international law and human rights standards. Human rights activists are also concerned about China’s nebulous definition of what constitutes ‘terrorism,’ which has led to the conviction of over 8,000 Chinese citizens who “may face up to 10 years in prison.” (Sources: Reuters, Human Rights Watch)
On June 30, 2020, China passed a new security law for Hong Kong which will make it easier to punish protesters, dramatically curb freedom of speech, and reduce the city’s autonomy. The new law criminalizes any act of secession, subversion, terrorism, and collusion with foreign or external forces. If charged under the new law, suspects could face a maximum sentence of life in prison. Hong Kong will administer its own national security commission to enforce the laws, but they will be privy to a Beijing-appointed adviser. Most significantly, Beijing will have power over how the law should be interpreted, overriding any decisions made by Hong Kong judicial and policy bodies. On July 3, 2020, Tong Ying-kit was the first person to be charged with “terrorism” under the new security law. Ying-kit previously held a “Liberate Hong Kong” sign as he drove into police at a protest against Beijing on July 1, 2020. (Sources: BBC News, Al Jazeera)
Since 1996, the Xinjiang government has launched regular “strike hard” campaigns as an attempt to crack down on violent extremism, separatism, and terrorism. As a result, a heavy police presence is a constant in Xinjiang. According to a 2008 Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies report, Chinese strike hard campaigns “[tamp] down violence in the short run but [fuel] a sense of injustice and mistrust among the [Uighurs] in the long-run.” Fresh crackdowns are implemented after outbreaks of violent ethnic tension between Uighurs and Han. For example, in February 2017, Chinese authorities made it compulsory for all vehicles in parts of Xinjiang to be fitted with satellite tracking devices. In the large northwestern autonomous prefecture of Bayingolin, drivers who refuse will not be permitted to purchase gas. (Sources: Wall Street Journal, Guardian, APCSS, BBC News)
Between March and April 2017, the Chinese government launched a security campaign in the Xinjiang province, ostensibly aimed at addressing “separatist, extremist, and terrorist activity.” The campaign targeted thousands of Uighur and other Muslim ethnic groups for detention, as well as increased surveillance and involuntary collection of biometric data. In March 2017, XUAR lawmakers passed a regional Anti-Religious Extremism Law. The law prohibits the dissemination, downloading, or sharing of “extremist” content. The law also criminalizes religious garments and “abnormal” beards as they are indications of radicalization. In April of that same year, the XUAR government mandated “re-education” programs for members of ethnic minority communities and students who study overseas in an effort to better “assimilate” into Chinese society. Citing terrorism concerns, authorities in the XUAR required all residents to install a surveillance application that automatically detects “terrorist and illegal” religious videos, images, e-books, and electronic documents on smart phones. The app reportedly has the capability to remotely delete this content. In October 2018, a BBC investigation found new evidence of Muslim internment in Xinjiang. The Chinese government had claimed that those detained had voluntarily entered into “vocational schools,” so-called re-education programs, which China says is used to counter “terrorism and religious extremism.” There is evidence that almost a million Muslims were interned without due process. (Sources: BBC News, U.S. Department of State)
On March 18, 2019, the State Council Information Office of the People’s Republic of China released a white paper entitled “The Fight Against Terrorism and Extremism and Human Rights Protection in Xinjiang.” Among other details, the report mentioned how Chinese authorities have arrested almost 13,000 “terrorists” in the far western region of Xinjiang since 2014. Since 2014, Xinjiang has “destroyed 1,588 violent and terrorist gangs, arrested 12,995 terrorists, seized 2,052 explosive devices, punished 30,645 people for 4,858 illegal religious activities, and confiscated 345,229 copies of illegal religious materials.” Following the publication of the report, critics—particularly, the World Uighur Congress—claim that China’s methods of counterterrorism serve as an excuse to suppress the Uighurs as well as further endorse the increasing Sinification of the Chinese public. (Sources: State Council Information Office of the People’s Republic of China, Al Jazeera)
On July 10, 2019, more than 22 countries at the United Nations’ Human Rights Council called on China to halt its mass detention of Uighurs. However, the ambassadors fell short of a formal statement being read out at the Council or a resolution submitted for a vote due to fears of potential political and economic backlash from China. Despite condemnation for China’s actions, 37 other countries expressed support for the repressive policies in XUAR. On July 30, 2019, Chinese officials claimed that they released the majority of the detainees despite not offering convincing evidence of mass releases. It is reported that people who had been freed effectively remained in captivity as many were forced into labor programs instead. (Sources: New York Times, Associated Press, Reuters, Xinhua, New York Times)
On November 24, 2019, the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists released a report on classified documents detailing XUAR’s system of mass surveillance as well as the operations manual for running the mass internment camps in XUAR. The documents were given to rank-and-file officials by the Xinjiang Communist Party Political and Legal Affairs Commission, who oversee state security, the courts, and police in the region. On February 18, 2020, the Associated Press released a report on a database detailing the detainment of over 311 individuals in XUAR. According to the database, the Chinese government focused on religion, rather than political extremism, as a reason for detention. Among the reasons why people were detained included perfunctory religious activities such as praying, attending mosque, or even growing a long beard. (Sources: Associated Press, Associated Press, International Consortium of Investigative Journalists)
On July 19, 2020, U.K. Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab accused China of “gross and egregious” human rights abuses against its Uighur population. The statement comes after the release of drone footage showing Uighurs in detention camps across the XUAR with shaved heads, while also being shackled and blindfolded as they are being led to trains. In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, it was also revealed that China has been using Uighur labor to produce personal protective equipment on a global scale. Around 17 out of 51 companies in the XUAR participate in the labor program, and given the cramped working conditions of most factories, it is uncertain if the necessary social distancing and safety measures are being observed to prevent the transmission of the coronavirus. Additionally, according to a June 2020 report published by the Associated Press, the Chinese government has funded a forced birth control and sterilization campaign against Uighur women. The investigation further detailed that if Uighur women have more than two children, they will either have to pay massive fines or be sent to detention camps. (Sources: BBC News, National Review, Axios, Associated Press)
On January 19, 2021, former U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo declared that the Chinese government is committing genocide and carrying out crimes against humanity against its Uighur population in the XUAR. Among the crimes are China’s use of internment camps and forced sterilization on predominantly Muslim ethnic minorities. The denunciation comes after the State Department’s documentation of China’s repressive actions against the Uighur Muslims and other ethnic and religious minority groups, including the Kazakhs and Kyrgyz, since at least March 2017. Despite the charge, in February 2021, the State Department’s Office of the Legal Advisor under the Biden Administration concluded that although China’s mass imprisonment of Uighurs and other ethnic minority groups in XUAR amounted to crimes against humanity, there was insufficient evidence to prove genocide. According to experts on international justice, genocide is often difficult to prove in court as crimes cannot be considered genocide unless there is concrete evidence of intent—which in China’s case would be the intent of decimating the Uighurs and other ethnic minority groups in the XUAR. However, international condemnation against China intensified, and in late February, the Dutch and Canadian parliaments passed motions that accuse China of committing genocide against its Muslim population. (Sources: CNN, U.S. Department of State, New York Times, Foreign Policy, CNN, CNN, Financial Times)
Although China’s State Councilor, Wang Yi, dismissed allegations of genocide at a press conference on March 7, two days later, the Newlines Institute for Strategy and Policy think tank released a report featuring more than 50 global experts in international law, genocide, and the China region that alleged China’s actions in Xinjiang have violated every provision in the United Nations’ Genocide Convention. On March 9, in an apparent reversal of their February claim, the U.S. Department of State announced their continued endorsement of the Trump administration’s genocide charge against China. The Biden administration further confirmed the designation on March 11. Given the allegations of human rights abuses, international officials, as well as more than 100 human rights organizations, have called for Beijing to be stripped of the 2022 Winter Olympic Games. (Sources: CNN, Reuters, CNN, Associated Press, White House)
On March 18, 2021, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and national security adviser Jake Sullivan met with Wang Yi and the foreign affairs chief of the Chinese Communist Party, Yang Jiechi, in Anchorage, Alaska. The highly anticipated two-day talks were expected to address trade and human rights violations in Tibet, Hong Kong, and the XUAR. Despite a heated exchange, the United States and China did not establish a clear path on next steps regarding tariffs and human rights in Xinjiang and Hong Kong. (Sources: Associated Press, U.S. Department of State, Bloomberg Law, Financial Times)
On March 22, 2021, the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctioned two Chinese government officials—Wang Junzheng, the secretary of the Party Committee of the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps (XPCC), and Chen Mingguo, the director of the Xinjiang Public Security Bureau—in connection with human rights abuses against ethnic minorities in the XUAR. In coordination with the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, and the European Union also agreed to impose travel bans and asset freezes on those individuals and one entity. Along with Junzheng and Mingguo, the U.K., EU, and Canada sanctioned the XPCC, Zhu Hailun—the former secretary of the political affairs committee of Xinjiang who is allegedly the architect of the Uighur internment camps—and Wang Mingshan, a secretary to the XUAR political committee. Both men and the XPCC were previously sanctioned by OFAC in July 2020. The sanctions against Beijing are the first time in three decades that the U.K. or EU has punished China for human rights abuses. The previous sanction was an arms embargo imposed by the EU following the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown. (Sources: Bloomberg, Reuters, U.S. Department of the Treasury, Guardian, CTV, U.S. Department of the Treasury, The Times, BBC News, U.S. Department of the Treasury)
Outside of XUAR, Chinese authorities have also focused their attention on Hong Kong as it has been embroiled in mass demonstrations over the summer of 2019. Dissension began in February 2019 when the local government introduced a bill in Hong Kong’s legislature that would allow people accused of crimes to be sent to countries with which Hong Kong had no extradition treaty. Hong Kong was a British colony until 1997 when it was handed back to China under a policy known as “one country, two systems.” The policy made Hong Kong part of China but let it keep many liberties denied to citizens on the mainland, including free speech, unrestricted internet access, and the right to free assembly. China promised that this system would remain in place until at least 2047. However, the introduction of the bill catalyzed the public to demonstrate against the encroaching power of China. Fueled by anger toward the police, as well as the slow erosion of civil liberties, the largely leaderless protests morphed into a broader, more complicated movement about protecting freedoms, democracy, and Hong Kong’s autonomy. (Sources: New York Times, Washington Post)
Public demonstrations began in June and although mostly being peaceful, protests have culminated in violent responses from security forces and have been labeled by Chinese authorities as showing the “first signs of terrorism.” The city’s largest and most violent protest took place on June 12 when police officers fired tear gas and rubber bullets at demonstrators. On July 1, 2019, hundreds of demonstrators broke into the Legislative Council building, occupying it for hours and vandalizing it. Given the level of violence, on June 15, Hong Kong’s Chief Executive, Carrie Lam, claimed she would suspend the extradition bill, calling it “dead.” However, she refused to withdraw it entirely until September 4, when she announced she would formally withdraw the bill. It was unclear, however, whether that decision would be enough to quell the protest movement. The list of protesters’ demands has grown to include an independent investigation into the police response, amnesty for arrested participants, and direct elections for all lawmakers and the chief executive. (Source: Wall Street Journal, New York Times, BBC News)
On June 30, 2020, China approved a new national security law for Hong Kong that took direct aim at anti-government protestors. The law criminalized secession, undermining the power of the central government, terrorism—which is defined as using violence or intimidation against people, and collusion with foreign or external forces. Each of the crimes are punishable up to a maximum sentence of life in prison. The new law’s provisions provide Beijing with sweeping powers to curtail protests and freedom of speech. Given the draconian measures implemented by the new law, on July 2, 2020, the U.S. Senate voted to finalize the Hong Kong Autonomy Act to penalize individuals, banks and other entities that enable China’s security law. In an update to the Hong Kong Autonomy Act, on March 17, 2021, OFAC sanctioned two dozen Chinese and Hong Kong officials for undermining the territory’s semi-autonomy from Beijing. (Sources: Associated Press, BBC News, Politico, U.S. Department of the Treasury)
International Counter-Extremism
Under former leader Mao Zedong, China was a key patron of terrorist organizations such as the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, as well as a significant supporter of state sponsors of terrorism like Iran, Syria, and Libya. As China prioritized economic development over political objectives—seeking acceptance into the established world order—such links were discarded as inconvenient millstones. Today, China has completed its evolution from “open support for terrorist organizations to disengagement… to a position of active opposition.” (Source: Security Studies Quarterly)
China’s reversal on transnational counter-extremism is exemplified by the country’s leading role in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), a regional intergovernmental Asian organization formed in 2001. The SCO’s geographical focus of operations is Central Asia. It seeks to combat “the three evils of separatism, extremism and terrorism,” as China’s then-President Hu Jintao proclaimed at a 2004 SCO summit. SCO membership extends to Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan, while observer status is afforded to Afghanistan, India, Iran, Mongolia, and Pakistan. In July 2016, China held joint counterterrorism training with its largest SCO partner, Russia, in Moscow. China conducted similar exercises with Tajikistan later that year in October. Within the Central Asia region, China also hosted the opening conference of the newly formed Quadrilateral Cooperation and Coordination Mechanism in Counterterrorism, together with Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Tajikistan. The Mechanism seeks to improve coordination between the four countries in “intelligence sharing, anti-terrorist capability building, joint anti-terrorist training and personnel training.” Furthermore, more than 80 countries sent representatives to attend China’s Forum on International Cooperation in Countering the Use of Cyberspace for Criminal and Terrorist Purposes in December 2018. In a bid to deepen regional security cooperation, China and Kyrgyzstan initiated joint counterterrorism exercises in XUAR in August 2019. Over 150 personnel from the Chinese People’s Armed Police Force and the National Guard of Kygyzstan engaged in counterterrorism training. (Sources: APCSS, Congressional Research Service, Shanghai Cooperation Council, Hindustan Times, U.S. Department of State, Xinhua)
In November 2019, Chinese special police units held the first joint anti-terror drill with Serbian special police units in Smederevo, Serbia. The drills were staged at the Chinese owned HBIS Group Serbia Iron & Steel, in an effort to prevent and respond to potential terrorist attacks at the site. On March 15, 2020, Cambodia and China launched the fourth join drill on counter-terrorism and humanitarian rescue in Kampot province, Cambodia. The drills offered training programs including operating anti-terror equipment, live-firing practice, demining, man hunting, and search and rescue. (Sources: Xinhua, Xinhua)
Outside of the SCO, China’s willingness to cooperate with major Western nations on counter-extremism and counterterrorism is more muted. Long-standing skepticism about China’s human rights record has impeded assistance from the West, while China’s propensity for maintaining a low profile on the world stage has prevented its full engagement. Nevertheless, China held bilateral counterterrorism meetings with the United Kingdom and the United States in 2016. In November of the same year, the Chinese Vice-Minister of Security was elected as the president of INTERPOL for a four-year term. (Sources: Congressional Research Service, U.S. Department of State)
Following the 9/11 attacks, the United States called on China to play a greater role in combating global terrorism. In 2005, former Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick urged China “to become a responsible stakeholder” in the international system. Despite China’s voicing of strong support for the United States after 9/11, such calls failed to yield any substantive impact during the 2000s, as China shunned direct involvement in the U.S.-led Operation Enduring Freedom against al-Qaeda. (Sources: U.S. Department of State, Congressional Research Service)
However, as China tackles what it perceives as a surge in domestic Uighur extremism—especially by adopting Western intelligence techniques relying on “big data” collection—opportunities may emerge for enhanced cooperation between the China and the U.S. in particular. The same law that is set to push through domestic changes in counterterrorism policy, for instance, also seeks to increase international cooperation. Indicative of America’s growing willingness to join forces with China was President Obama’s January 2015 statement that “There are specific areas where we could work together, for example in stemming the flow of foreign terrorist fighters and cracking down on terrorist funding networks....” In May 2017, Chinese concerns about Xinjiang fighters joining militant groups in Syria and Iraq via Turkey—with which Uighurs share cultural and religious ties—prompted calls for enhanced cooperation between Beijing and Ankara. (Sources: Reuters, Washington Times, Reuters)
In late 2017, reports surfaced that the Chinese government was readying two Special Forces units to aid Syrian government troops. However, Chinese officials denied the claims. In August 2018, the Chinese ambassador to Syria said that China was prepared to provide military assistance to the Syrian army fighting terrorists. The Chinese military attaché in Syria also stated that cooperation between the two militaries was ongoing. In September 2018, Xinhua reported that China wanted its counterterrorism forces to play a bigger role overseas, in line with President Xi Jinping’s pursuit of a more robust foreign policy and the strategic interests of the state. (Sources: Middle East Monitor, Daily Beast, Financial Times, Reuters)