The razor wire that once ringed public buildings in China’s far northwestern Xinjiang region is nearly all gone.
Gone, too, are the middle school uniforms in military camouflage and the armored personnel carriers rumbling around the homeland of the Uyghurs. Gone are many of the surveillance cameras that once glared down like birds from overhead poles, and the eerie eternal wail of sirens in the ancient Silk Road city of Kashgar.
Uyghur teenage boys, once a rare sight, now flirt with girls over pounding dance music at rollerblading rinks. One cab driver blasted Shakira as she raced through the streets.
It’s hard to know why Chinese authorities have shifted to subtler methods of controlling the region. It may be that searing criticism from the West, along with punishing political and commercial sanctions, have pushed authorities to lighten up.
On the state-led tour in April, they took us to what they said was once a “training center”, now a regular vocational school in Peyzawat County. A mere fence marks the campus boundaries — a stark contrast from the barbed wire, high watchtowers and police at the entrance we saw three years ago. On our own, we see at least three other sites which once appeared to be camps and are now apartments or office complexes.
There was a German camera crew in some city that was shocked that people started following them around and shouting at them after they were focusing on shooting things like piles of refuse. Instead of the clean, nice new highrises. They had written their story before they ever got on the plane to China.
They were stupefied, too. They thought they were the victims. 100% they still tell the story at cocktail parties with other journalists, with the conclusion "and we just barely got out of there, and filed our report containing the truth."
Ah, but China has dirt, unlike our sparkling clean German cities like Hamburg.