The chief witness Escape from China's modern-day concentration camps

Sayragul Sauytbay

Book - 2021

"Born in China's north-western province, Sayragul Sauytbay trained as a doctor before being appointed a senior civil servant. But her life was upended when the Chinese authorities incarcerated her. Her crime: being Kazakh, one of China's ethnic minorities. The north-western province borders the largest number of foreign nations and is the point in China that is closest to Europe. In recent years it has become home to over 1,200 penal camps--modern-day gulags that are estimated to house three million members of the Kazakh and Uyghur minorities. Imprisoned solely due to their ethnicity, inmates are subjected to relentless punishment and torture, including being beaten, raped, and used as subjects for medical experiments. The ca...mps represent the greatest systematic incarceration of an entire people since the Third Reich. In prison, Sauytbay was put to work teaching Chinese language, culture, and politics, in the course of which she gained access to secret information that revealed Beijing's long-term plans to undermine not only its minorities, but democracies around the world. Upon her escape to Europe she was reunited with her family, but still lives under constant threat of reprisal. This rare testimony from the biggest surveillance state in the world reveals not only the full, frightening scope of China's tyrannical ambitions, but also the resilience and courage of its author."--Back cover.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

305.8943/Sauytbay
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 305.8943/Sauytbay Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
London : Scribe 2021.
Language
English
German
Main Author
Sayragul Sauytbay (author)
Other Authors
Alexandra Cavelius (author), Caroline Waight (translator)
Edition
US edition
Item Description
"First published in German in 2020 by Europa Verlag as Die Kronzeugin."--Title page verso.
Physical Description
308 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781950354528
  • Chapter 1. Ghosts of the Past
  • Chapter 2. Despite Chinese Invasion and Destruction: dreaming of a golden future and financial security
  • Chapter 3. Mouths Taped Shut
  • Chapter 4. Worse Than a Mental Hospital: the world's biggest surveillance state
  • Chapter 5. Total Control: interrogations and rape
  • Chapter 6. The Camp: surviving in hell
  • Chapter 7. Better to Die Escaping Than Die in the Camp
  • Chapter 8. Kazakhstan: Beijing's interference in neighbouring countries
  • Chapter 9. Viral: warning the world
  • Afterword
  • Photograph Credits
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Sauytbay, a member of the Muslim Kazakh ethnic minority in China's Xinjiang province, details her oppression by Chinese authorities in this harrowing account. In 2016, the Chinese Communist Party began a crackdown on the region's Muslim ethnic groups, including Uighurs and Kazakhs. Sauytbay chronicles the loss of homes, herding grounds, and holy places, as well as constant surveillance, forced relocation, and internment in "reeducation" camps. After her husband and two children fled to Kazakhstan, Sauytbay, a civil servant who ran five local kindergartens before the crackdown, was ordered to report to one of the camps and teach Chinese language and culture to the inmates. She describes how Muslim detainees were force-fed pork, beaten for speaking their native languages, and subjected to medical experiments, and alleges that some were even "disappeared" for organ harvesting. Suddenly released after months in the camp, she fled to Kazakhstan, where she reunited with her family before she was arrested by the secret police in that country and put on trial for entering the country illegally. Her testimony about the camps resulted in an outpouring of international pressure on Kazakhstan and her family's eventual relocation to Sweden. Full of disturbing evidence and visceral outrage at the failures of Western governments and corporations to hold China to account, this is a searing portrait of a still-unfolding tragedy. (June)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved