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How China defines religious extremism and how it justifies Xinjiang re-education camps for Muslims

While the law says officials must distinguish between everyday religious activity and extremism, its definition of the latter means even people who damage banknotes or reject mass media can be targeted

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Residents pass through a checkpoint at Hotan bazaar in Xinjiang, part of the sweeping security crackdown in the region. Photo: AP

Xinjiang in the far west of China this week enacted a legislative amendment to recognise its controversial “re-education camps”.

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A United Nations committee said it had received “credible reports” that the camps, referred to as “vocational training centres” in the new rules, are holding up to a million ethnic minority Uygurs and other Muslims and subjecting them to enforced political indoctrination.

Chinese officials denied the arbitrary detention of citizens, saying that they only sent those who committed minor criminal misdemeanours to receive vocational training.

The move is seen as a step by the government to retrospectively legitimise the internment camps. Here is the story behind the camps.

What is the legislation about?

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Xinjiang first introduced its “Regulation on Anti-Extremism” in April 2017 to ban a wide range of “extremist behaviour” following a string of terrorist attacks.

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