Facing abuse, teenage Uyhgur girls are forced to work in a Xinjiang garment factory

About 90 Uyghur teenage girls are locked up in a Chinese-run garment factory in Xinjiang, where they are forced to toil 14 hours a day, seven days a week, and routinely face verbal and physical abuse, an investigation by Radio Free Asia has found.

The Wanhe Garments Co. Ltd. in Maralbeshi county has a secret agreement with the nearby Yarkent 2nd Vocational High School under which female students aged 16 to 18 are sent to work at the factory against their will, according to four sources, including a village chief and the factory’s security chief, all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity to speak freely.

Local authorities have pressured parents not to object to sending their children to work at the factory, said the village chief, a woman who was responsible for coaxing the parents to let the girls go.

Workers at the plant, which also employs about a dozen women in their 30s and 40s as well as some men, are prevented from leaving. They sleep in dormitories on the factory compound. Most are Uyghurs, but about 15 are Chinese who came from elsewhere to work.

The girls are kept in line by a middle-aged Uyghur woman named Tursun’gul Memtimin – called “teacher” by the workers – who regularly insults and criticizes them, and sometimes hits them with a bat, said the village official.

“The ‘teacher’ is known to have a very bad temper. She physically assaults the workers using a bat as a means of inflicting harm,” she said.

“The workers live in fear of her, and due to this intimidating environment, no one dares to make an escape,” the official told RFA.

Forced labor in supply chains

The revelation comes amid mounting evidence of Uyghur forced labor in Xinjiang and allegations that forced labor is used in the supply chains of major companies. 

Inditex, owner of the Zara clothing chain, and Uniqlo parent Fast Retailing, as well as carmakers Volkswagen, Mercedes-Benz and BMW have all come under increased scrutiny to ensure that they aren’t using Uyghur forced labor.

In the United States, the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, signed into law in December 2021, requires American companies that import goods from Xinjiang to prove that they have not been manufactured with Uyghur forced labor at any stage of production.  

Repeated requests by RFA to Wanhe factory officials for an interview have been ignored.

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A Uyghur woman in a scooter rides past a poster showing China’s President Xi Jinping joining hands with a group of Uighur elders at the Unity New Village in Hotan, in western China’s Xinjiang region, Sept. 20, 2018. Photo: Andy Wong/AP.

Despite the intense security around the factory, some workers have managed to escape – but not for long.

Last April, during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, four girls slipped out of the compound and returned to their families in the village of Charibagh in Yarkent county, the village chief and factory security guard said.

Within a few days, Memtimin and some other factory officials went to the village to forcibly bring the girls back. They threatened to send their parents to “re-education” camps if they didn’t turn over their daughters, the village official said.

The village chief said she proposed to Memtimin that the girls work at a larger factory in Charibagh, but the manager refused.

“So we packed their belongings and took them to the train station,” she told RFA. “Their parents were scared that Tursungul would send them for re-education, so they handed over their daughters.”

Once back inside the factory, the girls underwent “criticism and education,” the security chief said.

Long hours, meager pay

The garment factory employs residents who mostly hail from Maralbeshi, or Bachu in Chinese, in Kashgar province, the largest cotton-producing county in Xinjiang. 

Ranging in age from 16 to 45, the workers toil from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. in three shifts, with hour-long breaks for lunch and dinner, the security chief said.

They are paid monthly salaries of roughly 300 yuan (US$42) or 400 yuan (US$56) at best, the guard and village chief said.

“The government forcefully brought those workers to the factory to work, and they could not leave the factory of their own will,” said the guard.

A Chinese husband-and-wife team oversees the factory, and gives orders to Memtimin and to the security chief, who jointly manage the workers, the village chief said.

Secret agreement

The village official said that about 90 students were first transferred from Yarkent 2nd Vocational High School – for students ages 15 to 18 – to the factory in February 2017 based on a private contract.

She said she saw a contract that was signed by Wanhe officials and the school’s two principals, surnamed Qurbanjan and Abdurusul. Neither the workers nor their families were aware of the agreement’s content, she said.

“Tursun’gul Memtimin speaks Chinese, so the Vocational High School invited her to work for them. She does not teach at the school, but she manages the workers at the factory,” the village official said. 

“Her monthly salary is 6,500 yuan (US$910). The school gives her 3,000 yuan, and the factory gives her 3,500 yuan,” she said. 

“I saw the signatures of Qurbanjan and Abdurusul on the contract,” she said. “They are the presidents of 2nd Vocational High School.”

Attempts to reach school administrators were unsuccessful. 

But two officials at the Yarkent County Education Bureau described the contract’s content as “a state secret,” and that they were aware of the workers’ situation.

“I know the contract between the Vocational High School and Wenhe Clothes Factory,” said the education bureau chief, insisting he not be named for security purposes. “But it is considered a state secret, so we cannot say anything about it hastily.”

The factory security guard also confirmed the existence of a secret contract.

“The workers complained about Tursun’gul because she has a terrible mouth and curses them,” he said. “We cannot say Tursun’gul has a right to condemn and beat the workers, but she deals with workers’ problems.”

“I cannot tell you if it is in the contract that the workers cannot leave the factory on their own will,” he said.

Cotton industry

The Wenhe Garments factory was set up in an industrial zone in Maralbeshi in 2014, public records show. The area was poor, and required support from other cities.

The company is one of thousands of textile and garment enterprises that have injected investment and built factories in southern Xinjiang, according to an October 2021 report by the official Xinhua News Agency.

The Chinese government and the garment industry set up a vocational skills training school to train rural residents in the use of sewing machines and other equipment, the report said.

By the end of 2020, Xinjiang’s production capacity in the cotton textile industry accounted for 17.6% of China’s total capacity and provided jobs for almost 600,000 people, the report said.

For companies, cheap labor is a key draw.

“It is difficult to recruit workers with a wage of 3,000 yuan ($420) in the mainland, but here we can hire them for 1,500 yuan,” said Yang Yuqing, Wanhe’s chairman, who hails from Henan province, and has served as vice president of the Henan Garment Association. 

“In addition to the government’s various preferential policies and subsidies, under the same conditions, the company can save 10% to 15% of costs,” Yang told the China Textile magazine. “Currently, Xinjiang has indeed provided great support to garment companies.”

But workers in the factory are mistreated, the village chief said.

Even those who suffer from physical exhaustion and end up in the hospital are made to return to work as soon as possible.

After a worker collapsed from excessive work and was hospitalized, Memtimin made threatening phone calls to him, the village official said. He wanted to return home to recover, but she made him return directly to the plant instead.

Translated by the Uyghur Service. Edited by Roseanne Gerin and Malcolm Foster.

Yoon makes surprise visit to Ukraine

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol has made an unannounced visit to Ukraine, his office said Saturday.

The visit comes at the end of a two-leg trip that earlier took him to Lithuania for a North Atlantic Treaty Organization summit and then to Poland for an official visit.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

First ladies of S. Korea, Ukraine meet in Kyiv

South Korean first lady Kim Keon Hee and Ukrainian first lady Olena Zelenska met in Kyiv on Saturday and discussed ways to support Ukrainian refugees, the presidential office said.

Kim accompanied President Yoon Suk Yeol on a surprise visit to Ukraine earlier in the day at the end of a two-nation tour that took them to Lithuania for a North Atlantic Treaty Organization summit and then to Poland for an official visit.

Kim recalled her visit to the Ukrainian Center in Vilnius earlier this week, saying she was deeply moved to see on display pictures that were drawn by Ukrainian refugee children and wished to exhibit them in South Korea, according to senior presidential secretary for press affairs Kim Eun-hye.

“More people will be moved when they see these pictures drawn by Ukrainian refugees and voluntarily donate for Ukraine,” Kim was quoted as saying. “Let’s hold a joint exhibition between our countries until Ukraine’s reconstruction is complete.”

Zelenska agreed it would be a good opportunity to show the world the horrors of the war and proposed related discussions between the two countries.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

(News Focus) S. Korea ramps up diplomatic pressure campaign against N.K. during ASEAN meetings

South Korea engaged in a whirlwind of diplomacy this week to unite members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and international partners in standing together against evolving threats from North Korea.

In particular, Seoul managed to successfully persuade ASEAN to issue a joint statement condemning the North’s intercontinental ballistic missile launch this week.

The test launch of Pyongyang’s Hwasong-18 solid-fuel ICBM was conducted Wednesday morning while the annual ASEAN meetings, a major multilateral diplomacy event for the region, were under way in the capital of Indonesia.

The ASEAN foreign ministers’ statement condemning Pyongyang’s missile launch was issued just one day after the test firing.

In Indonesia, Foreign Minister Park Jin participated in four multilateral events — the South Korea-ASEAN and ASEAN plus three meetings, the East Asia Summit ministerial gathering and the ASEAN Regional Forum — along with bilateral and trilateral meetings on the sidelines.

Along with the Ukrainian War and Myanmar’s internal crisis, North Korea was discussed as a major topic throughout the meetings that also brought together top officials of the U.S., China, Japan, Russia and other key nations.

During the back-to-back sessions, Park repeatedly condemned the North’s continued provocations and highlighted that they were in clear violation of United Nations Security Council resolutions.

He also stressed the need for ASEAN and its partners to stand together in sending a clear message that the international community’s determination to denuclearize the North is stronger than the North’s will to arm itself with nuclear weapons.

The meetings were held behind closed doors, but an official familiar with the discussions said many ASEAN nations joined Seoul in denouncing Pyongyang.

Some of the language used by ASEAN nations in denouncing the North’s actions reportedly included words and phrases such as “condemn,” “great concern” and “multiple UNSC resolution violations.”

South Korean officials in Jakarta were reportedly surprised by the reaction, given how many countries in the region have maintained diplomatic ties with North Korea.

Sources also said ASEAN members urged the North to return to dialogue during the discussions.

“There were many working-level consultations (on the North Korean issue). The North presumably fired a solid fuel ICBM so we had to actively engage with ASEAN partners to have strong language appear (in the ministers’ statement),” a Seoul official said.

In a meeting with reporters Friday before leaving Jakarta, Park said he took note of how the ministers’ statement was issued just moments before their talks with him Thursday.

“This goes to show that (the ASEAN members) see the situation on the Korean Peninsula and take the North’s provocation very seriously,” he said.

South Korea’s activities at the ASEAN meetings were also highlighted by its trilateral foreign ministerial talks with the U.S. and Japan.

Park and his U.S. and Japanese counterparts, Antony Blinken and Yoshimasa Hayashi, respectively, met Friday evening and issued a joint statement denouncing the North’s missile launch, ending South Korea’s diplomatic pressure campaign against Pyongyang at ASEAN on a high note.

At home, meanwhile, Seoul announced fresh sanctions on the North, adding four individuals and three entities to its blacklist against Pyongyang as the ASEAN meetings proceeded.

North Korea’s presence at the meetings, meanwhile, appeared low-key. At the ARF, Pyongyang was represented by An Kwang-il, its ambassador to Indonesia, instead of Foreign Minister Choe Son-hui.

The North is a member of the region’s largest security meeting. At the venue for the ARF, An avoided answering questions asked by South Korean reporters.

During the ARF session, An argued that the North’s provocations were acts of self-defense taken in response to the combined military exercises by South Korea and the U.S., according to sources familiar with the discussions.

The ambassador also reportedly argued that the cause of problems related to tensions over the Korean Peninsula did not lie with the North but came from other places, they added.

He also reportedly insisted that its military provocations did not pose a threat to neighboring nations.

Before this year’s ARF, observers had kept a close eye on a possible chance encounter between Park and Choe. The North Korean minister also did not attend last year’s forum in Cambodia.

Instead, Park reportedly had a brief exchange with An while the head of the delegates paid a courtesy call on Indonesian President Joko Widodo. It was their second encounter following their first one in Cambodia last year.

Park was known to have said to An that it was important for the North to stop its missile launches and resume denuclearization talks for the peace of the Korean Peninsula. The North’s ambassador reportedly did not show any particular reaction to Park’s comments.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Lancang-Mekong media tour mega projects in Guangdong, China

A group tour organized early this month under the Lancang-Mekong Cooperation framework has brought our media practitioners from Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, and China to major development projects in Guangdong, China.

The trip was part of Lancang-Mekong Cooperation Media Summit hosted by People’s Daily.

The ASEAN and Chinese journalists were amazed by all of these infrastructure projects with some boasting world-class details.

We began with visiting Lingdingyang Bridge on July 2. The bridge is an important control project of Shenzhen-Zhongshen link in Zhuhai City, China.

Lingdingyang bridge has a total length of 2,826 m. Its main span is 1,666m, which is the world’s largest span offshore suspension bridge. The bridge has a deck height of 91 m, making it the world’s tallest mid-sea bridge. The main tower adopts a portal structure, with the height of 270 m, making it the world’s tallest mid-sea bridge tower. The anchor weighs 1.7 million tons and is the world’s largest anchor in the ocean.

We then stopped at Shenzhen-Zhongshan bridge. This bridge connects Shenzhen city and Zhongshan city in Guangdong province. It is a world-class cluster project of bridges, “islands tunnels and underwater connectivity”, and a core transportation hub in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay area. The 7-billion-USD bridge is expected to be put into public use in 2024.

Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay area includes two special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macao, as well as nine Pearl River Delta cities in Guangdong province, namely Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Foshen, Dongguan, Zhongshan, Zhuhai, Huizhou, Jiangmen and Zhaoqing.

It will be built into a dynamic world-class city cluster, an international scientific and technological innovation center with global influence, an important support for the construction of “Belt and Road”, a demonstration area for in-depth cooperation between the mainland and Hong Kong and Macao, and high quality life circle suitable for living, working and traveling.

Our last stop of the trip was China Communications Construction Group (CCCC). The corporate is mainly engaged in the investment, design, construction and operation of transportation infrastructure such as highway, waterway, railway and airport.

CCCC has a strong ability of independent innovation and created a number of “world top” projects. It not only has the whole industry chain integration service ability in the field of Transport up-gradation and city regeneration, but also has unique advantages in internationalization, river lake sea governance and so on.

With over 30 years of experience in the Lancang-Mekong market, CCCC has been fully involved in the construction of the economic development belt in the area especially after the introduction of the Lancang-Mekong Cooperation mechanism. CCCC has implemented over 13 billion USD of high-quality infrastructure projects with Chinese technology and Chinese solutions, creating a series of landmark projects served as “Bridge liking hearts”, “Road to wealth”, “Port for development”, “City of happiness”, and “Clean power”. These projects have brought a better living experience to the local people.

Source: Lao News Agency

(3rd LD) Torrential rains leave at least 10 dead, 3 missing, thousands evacuated

Heavy rains have killed at least 10 people and caused thousands to evacuate their homes across the country, authorities said Saturday.

The Central Disaster and Safety Countermeasure Headquarters said three people remained missing and seven others were injured.

Two people died in a building collapse triggered by a landslide in Nonsan, South Chungcheong Province, on Friday.

One person was killed in a mudslide in the central city of Sejong and housing collapses killed three people in the southeastern county of Yeongju and the central county of Cheongyang.

Two people, including a woman in her 60s, were killed when a landslide destroyed a home in Bonghwa, North Gyeongsang Province, at around 9 a.m.

In the central city of Cheongju, a car was struck by a landslide, killing one person.

Also in the city, one person died and eight others were rescued in the morning, after an underground roadway was flooded when a nearby river overflowed.

Fire authorities said a flash flood submerged the road too quickly for drivers and passengers to evacuate themselves.

The exact number of cars and victims was unknown, they said, suggesting more people could be trapped on the flooded road.

The casualties are feared to rise as government agencies assess damage reported across the nation.

Some 6,400 residents in the central county of Goesan were evacuated, as the Goesan Dam began to overflow at around 6:30 a.m. Many low-lying villages near the dam were submerged, and roads and bridges connecting the villages were cut off, trapping some residents in their homes.

A total of 1,567 people from 1,002 households in 13 cities and counties had sought temporary shelters as of Saturday morning, as heavy downpours continued to fall across the country. Among them, 1,114 people could not return home due to safety concerns.

In the central city of Gongju, residents were ordered to evacuate at 9:57 a.m. as an apartment complex was flooded.

A train derailed in Cheongju at 10:58 p.m. Friday as significant rainfall triggered a mudslide. An engine driver sustained light injuries and was taken to a hospital. No other casualties were reported.

Thirty-one cases of damage to public property were reported, including 10 mudslides and six cases where roads were destroyed, while 71 cases of damage to private property were reported, including 22 flooded homes.

Electricity blackouts were reported in 13 cities and counties nationwide. While power has been restored in most places, more than 8,300 households in Mungyeong, Yeongju and Yecheon in North Gyeongsang Province still don’t have electricity.

Floods swept away crops and roads. Nationwide, 97 roads remain closed, while 384 trails in 19 national parks are closed.

The Korea Railroad Corp. (KORAIL) suspended all regular trains and some KTX bullet trains that run through the country’s central inland region due to heavy rains. KORAIL also warned of slower service in routes connecting Seoul to the country’s southern parts, including Busan and Jeolla Province.

The Korea Meteorological Administration issued heavy rain warnings, especially for the Chuncheong and Jeolla provinces, saying heavy rains are forecast to fall across the nation until Wednesday and until next weekend for Jeju Island. The weather conditions pose a “grave” danger, it added.

Cheongyang in South Chungcheong Province has received 512 millimeters of rainfall since Thursday, and Iksan in North Jeolla Province has received 469.5 mm.

On Thursday, the Ministry of Public Administration and Security raised the natural disaster level posed by torrential rains to the highest in the three-tier system.

Prime Minister Han Duck-soo on Saturday ordered officials to swiftly evacuate people in landslide-prone regions to minimize casualties, and do their utmost to rescue people in affected areas.

Source: Yonhap News Agency