June 29, 2017 - Chinese authorities in the northwestern region of Xinjiang are ordering residents to hand in all digital devices for “checking” at local police stations by Aug. 1, as part of an operation targeting “terrorist videos,” according to an announcement and official sources.
"According to the requirements of stability maintenance measures, the Baoshan community district will be carrying out a specific anti-terrorist videos operation," a notice issued to residents of the regional capital Urumqi’s Baoshan district said.
“Please would all residents and business owners of the district submit their personal ID cards, cell phones, external drives, portable hard drives, notebook computers and media storage cards and any similar devices to our district police post for registration and scanning by Aug. 1, 2017," the June 27 notice said.
"Anyone who fails to submit the above devices and content by the stated time will be dealt with according to the relevant national law, should any problems arise," it said, calling on local people to respond "proactively" to the order.
An employee who answered the phone at the Baoshan district committee offices confirmed to RFA that the order is genuine.
"Handheld computers, smartphones, and storage devices [must be handed in]," she said. "We have a special system for scanning them, and this is happening across the whole city, not just here in our district."
"These are orders from higher up."
‘Everyone must obey’
A Han Chinese officer at the Baoshan district police station also confirmed the directive, saying the directive was to “check and clean up illegal audio-video content.”
“As long as you are a Chinese citizen, it is your obligation to cooperate with us, under the necessity of stability maintenance,” he said.
“As soon as residents see the announcement, they should bring their smart phones, USB drives, [tablets] and notebook computers—these four types of devices—to the nearest police station for inspection.”
According to the officer, authorities will install software that opens “everything” stored on the devices, including documents, archived items, and “anything unclean,” without providing details.
He said that “every Chinese citizen has an obligation to participate” in the inspection, though he acknowledged that the order did not extend beyond Xinjiang, where he said the situation is “unlike any other part” of China in the aftermath of ethnic unrest in Urumqi, on July 5, 2009.
If anyone fails to bring a device for inspection, “we will find them through their mobile phone,” the officer said.
“Everyone must obey—if they don’t come, they will face legal consequences,” he added.
The officer said that anyone born in Xinjiang must comply with the order, regardless of whether they are living in other parts of China, or even in one of “26 designated countries” abroad, without specifying which nations.
“They must bring their devices for checkup as soon as they return,” he said.
“This includes all Han Chinese and ethnic minorities. As long as you are from Xinjiang, you understand well what we’re doing here.”
View this story online at: http://www.rfa.org/english/news/uyghur/surveillance-06292017134132.html
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