The Daily XX
[0] From the New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
[1] This is the Daily.
[2] Today, under Xi Jinping, China is pioneering a new form of governance by surveillance.
[3] In the first of a two -part series, my colleague Paul Moser, on how China piloted that system on one minority group in the country.
[4] It's Monday, May 6th.
[5] Hi, hi.
[6] Headphones.
[7] Paul, we've actually never met.
[8] You are in town from China.
[9] I'm hoping you're going to tell me why.
[10] Yeah, so I've been reporting in and around China for about 12 years, and there's always been a lot of control, and I think people are kind of aware of that.
[11] They're aware there's censorship.
[12] They're aware that people can be followed, and, you know, there is a certain amount of surveillance.
[13] But in the past five years, things have really changed and taken a much more dramatic and darker turn, really, when it comes to especially surveillance.
[14] and that sort of coincides with the rise of Xi Jinping.
[15] So China's president who came into power about five years ago has really doubled down on control.
[16] And he has been not shy at all about using technology to exert that control.
[17] And, you know, there's a lot of things that are invisible in how that works, but one of the very few kind of visible symptoms are the cameras.
[18] There were always some cameras in China, but recently, past couple of years, the cameras have just gone in in this dramatic way.
[19] Some of them look like these sort of, like, like Baroque modernist sculptures or something.
[20] I mean, it's like four cameras, you know, stretching off of a different pole or you have a camera hanging from a tree.
[21] I mean, there's these almost hidden cameras in the subway cars, these little holes.
[22] And if you look closely at them, you say, oh, my God, that's actually a lens.
[23] I counted the cameras on my way to work one day, which is a two subway stop ride.
[24] And I passed, I think, 250 cameras.
[25] Wow.
[26] Yeah.
[27] In what kind of places?
[28] All kinds of places.
[29] Every intersection will have dozens of cameras to catch people's license plates as they drive by.
[30] About every 50 yards, you'll have a camera on a pole that's kind of a dome camera that can zoom in and grab their faces or follow somebody if you have to.
[31] When you walk downstairs, there's these high -powered facial recognition cameras aimed at your face with the idea of kind of trying to figure out who you are as you walk by.
[32] And who's on the other side of those cameras?
[33] Yeah, it's what I always sort of wonder.
[34] We don't always know, and this is the thing about China, is that it is an autocratic system with very little transparency.
[35] For the most part, what we assume is a newly empowered police force is using these to try to learn as much as they can about the population and track them.
[36] But to the degree that there's a rationale for this, what is it?
[37] Security.
[38] Safety.
[39] We want to make sure that if something bad were to happen in our neighborhood, we could protect ourselves.
[40] But in some recent reporting, what we discovered is the true sort of breathtaking ways in which the police are already assembling lists of faces of people that they're worried about and even using it to sort of, sort of.
[41] of mark people based on ethnicity and race and track them and keep a record.
[42] I mean, it's as if you were just counting only one group of people as they went around a city and keeping tabs so that you can go back and see which person that was.
[43] And in America, this would be, you know, horrendously unconstitutional.
[44] But in China, it had been happening for almost two years without anybody even noticing.
[45] And why would China want to do that?
[46] Why would it track a group of people by race through cameras and this classification system?
[47] Right.
[48] So China has had this sort of long issue with a Muslim minority known as the Uyghurs who live out in Western China, this massive province, a fifth the size of China's landmass called Xinjiang.
[49] It's mostly desert and really high mountains.
[50] It's the old Silk Road, you know, and these people have lived there for, you know, more than a thousand years in these tiny little oasis cities around the desert.
[51] And China has occupied their land for several hundred years now.
[52] And as China has occupied it, for the most part, until maybe the past 50s, 50 or 60 years, it's mostly just kind of been a far -flung place.
[53] But under the Chinese Communist Party, they've really solidified power.
[54] And they've started to change the demographics.
[55] So they've created all these passive incentives to move Han Chinese into this region.
[56] To basically make it less Muslim, more Chinese.
[57] Exactly.
[58] And so 50 or 60 years ago, there were almost no Chinese and it was all Uyghurs.
[59] Now it's 50 % Chinese, 50 % weaker.
[60] And that's created all of these conflicts.
[61] But everything really changed in 2009.
[62] What happens is there's a sort of violence in this small factory in southern China, and it turns out that there was a rumor that these two Uyghur factory workers raped a Chinese woman, and then when the ethnic Chinese confront the Uyghur population at the factory, a big fight breaks out, where ultimately two Uyghurs end up beaten to death.
[63] And there's a video of this on YouTube, and it goes around.
[64] And, you know, in a tinderbox like Xinjiang, where you have all of the, you have all of, of these other tensions there.
[65] It sort of becomes one of the main causes for this massive outburst of rioting and anger in the capital of Arumqi.
[66] Thousands of Uyghurs take to the streets, some with knives, and they murder about 200 Han Chinese.
[67] Wow.
[68] So it's a brutal and large -scale race rioter.
[69] And following that, the military is mobilized.
[70] The internet is cut off in Xinjiang, so you cannot get online.
[71] even phone calls outside the country are no longer allowed.
[72] It's a sort of new level of suffocating technological response.
[73] And so in the ensuing decade, what they've tried to do is figure out methods to sort of systematize it.
[74] And so they've turned to the police and they've turned to technology.
[75] Have you been back there recently?
[76] Yeah.
[77] So I went back in October to Kashgar.
[78] It's a transformed place.
[79] It's one of the most bizarre places I think I've ever been.
[80] You know, we're, of course, followed by secret police wherever we go.
[81] There are checkpoints every couple hundred yards, and they've created these things called convenience police centers.
[82] So think of a convenience store, but it's a police station instead, so these small kind of concrete boxes with constantly flashing lights.
[83] And there are every couple hundred yards, and police are in them, and they'll set up checkpoints there.
[84] But the idea is to kind of blanket the city with this very suffocating level of police presence and surveillance.
[85] This is sort of old mudbrick city filled with, you know, of bazaars.
[86] And now what you have is that kind of a look, but with these tremendously powerful facial recognition cameras hanging from, you know, a mudbrick wall.
[87] And there are cameras absolutely everywhere.
[88] And so you have this very bizarre contrast of a place that in some ways feels like it could be timeless in a thousand years old with these hypermodern technological solutions attempting to understand and track the populations.
[89] So tell me about that tracking.
[90] So clearly China is very anxious that this Muslim population, is going to revolt or just generally disobey the desires of the Chinese government.
[91] So how does that translate into this surveillance apparatus?
[92] What are they going to do with the image of a Muslim man or a woman in this place that's going to stop that?
[93] Well, so they've already thrown about a million people in camps.
[94] Like kind of labor camps.
[95] Yeah, well, they call them re -education camps and we don't have a lot of understanding of what happens inside, but it seems to be kind of day -long classes and people being made to sit and hear Chinese Communist Party theory and propaganda and things like that.
[96] They need excuses to put people in these places, right?
[97] So if you have this massive surveillance system, you can kind of find people that you think might be dangerous or might be risky.
[98] But the thing is it's so over the top and so extreme, people get thrown in because they're an academic because they're influential, because they use technology, because they wouldn't shave their beard, because they read the Quran.
[99] I mean, And there's a million different ways what they've done is just tracked everybody all the time in a way that nobody even can go out their door without feeling sort of the weight of the gaze of the state.
[100] Right.
[101] Everything you just described would be something that you could capture on camera.
[102] You would see someone with a beard.
[103] You might see someone reading the Quran.
[104] And that could be the trigger.
[105] Right.
[106] And I mean, they've hung lots of cameras in mosques.
[107] So the Idka mosque is this beautiful mustard yellow mosque that sits in the center of old cash gardens, kind of the heart of Uighur Islam.
[108] And they've, I think I counted more than 200 cameras inside the mosque trying to capture worshippers who would come and go.
[109] And there aren't many worshippers anymore, of course, because who's going to go walk in front of those cameras and show their faces?
[110] And then that very easily can just go into a database and then they have a data point.
[111] They know that Michael was right outside the Idkar Mosque on this time.
[112] And then when he leaves the Adka Mosque, he'll have to give his idea again.
[113] And then when he goes down to the marketplace, he has to give his idea again.
[114] And that way you can build a comprehensive map of where you're going.
[115] If you want to go to the bank, if you want to go to a grocery store, store, you have to do this.
[116] If you want to enter the old city, you have to do it.
[117] And so it effectively just makes it impossible to do anything in this society without constantly giving up your private information to the state and to the police.
[118] And what you're describing is the definition of dystopia.
[119] Yeah.
[120] And it, I mean, it goes even deeper than this.
[121] Around 2017, 2016, in Kashgar, we've heard that many people were called in for compulsory medical checkups.
[122] And they never got the results of the medical checkup.
[123] But what the medical checkup was, was they had to give a blood sample and their faces were scanned.
[124] And they had to give a voice sample, irises were scanned, and so just this sort of mass collection of a single ethnicities' biometric information.
[125] And we don't really know entirely what they'll do with all of that.
[126] In our reporting, we've seen parts of this.
[127] We've seen some of the dossiers.
[128] And so they can map people's family relationships.
[129] Wow.
[130] And what might the Chinese government do with that information about family members, all those connections.
[131] They use it to lean on people and they use it to intimidate people and they use it to show that they are so powerful that there would be no point in a way to resist or push back.
[132] And you could see it in the population, the fear.
[133] I'm just trying to understand where this leads to because this doesn't seem like an effort to a culture of people or to encourage them toward a Chinese identity.
[134] If anything, the people who are being subjected to this would most likely resent the Chinese government, right?
[135] Right.
[136] I think the thinking goes further than that.
[137] The hope is ultimately to, I think, change the population fundamentally, to re -engineer a new way of life for these people that is basically Chinese.
[138] And I think the ultimate goal here is to eradicate Uyghur culture.
[139] And the thing is, if they fail, well, then they have a culture so completely in their control that it's no longer a threat in any way.
[140] Paul, what's the relationship between what's happening to the Uyghurs and the larger surveillance state in China.
[141] If the rest of China is already Chinese, how does this all connect?
[142] So a lot of people like to call Xinjiang the sort of laboratory for Chinese surveillance.
[143] So if you have any kind of draconian solution to tracking somebody or figuring out what somebody's doing on their phone, you can try it out in Xinjiang and see what happens, right?
[144] In Xinjiang, they can get away with a lot more because you have an ethnic minority that is already sort of so beset that they can't really push back.
[145] A group without any power.
[146] Right, exactly.
[147] In the rest of China, you see something that's a little bit more passive, but you see a constant creep.
[148] On the subway, for instance, you start to see more checkpoints.
[149] The police just kind of sit out where people are transferring, and they just stop people at random, and they scan their ID card, just like what happened in Xinjiang.
[150] And one of the things our reporting showed is that, you know, it's not just Uyghurs they're looking for in these cities.
[151] They're making lists of people's faces depending on what kind of group they are.
[152] So they are making lists of the mentally ill. They're making lists of people with a past history of drug use.
[153] They're making lists of people who would petition the government or complain about the government.
[154] But they also have lists of every single person registered to live in that city.
[155] So the idea isn't just to track these small groups.
[156] It's to track everyone with the idea that if somebody were to get out of line, then you know everything about them to begin with.
[157] So this is about every single person in China.
[158] Yes.
[159] I'm struck that all this is happening at the same time that China is becoming a world power whose influence is growing so much overseas because those things don't quite seem to be consistent.
[160] In fact, they seem to be very contradictory.
[161] Right, and I think they've basically proved that wrong, that you can have censorship and you can have a closed society in some ways in a controlled society, but also have a booming tech sector.
[162] And this is the first time in probably 30 years that we've had.
[163] an autocratic state alongside the United States at the cutting edge of technology.
[164] So if you think about it, democracies have dominated technological creation since the fall of the Berlin Wall effectively, right?
[165] Now China's coming along and they're making technologies, but these technologies are suited for their purposes.
[166] And in a lot of cases, those purposes have some authoritarian component to them or some point of control to them, very intentional control.
[167] And in fact, as they've risen, they've used All of this is a selling point.
[168] So think to the Beijing Olympics in 2008.
[169] This is China's coming out party as a new superpower.
[170] They've outfitted the Capitol with tons of security to make sure it goes well, to make sure there's no protests, but also to make sure there's no attacks or anything.
[171] And so they load up the city with 300 ,000 cameras that the government was controlling.
[172] Because, of course, this is a moment where you actually do want a lot of security.
[173] Yeah, exactly.
[174] Yeah.
[175] So they really pulled out all the stops.
[176] But then what they did, when all these international leaders arrived to see the Olympics as they took them into the sort of back rooms where you could see all these cameras operating, they show the screens, they show this is how our policing system works.
[177] So who was in there?
[178] So we don't know everybody that visited, but what we do know is that countries like Ecuador sent delegations, places that might be sort of struggling with democracy or even already be sort of led by strongmen who have come to check this out.
[179] And there's screens up with video footage from these thousands and thousands of cameras and they can see how the Chinese security forces can see everything.
[180] They look at it and they say, well, this is pretty powerful.
[181] I wonder if we could get this.
[182] And that's where it starts.
[183] And so now what we're seeing is those technologies are beginning to flow to the world.
[184] And so all of a sudden, on the streets of Quito, you see the same cameras that you would see in Shanghai.
[185] And that's not just happening there.
[186] That's happening in Venezuela.
[187] That's happening in Bolivia.
[188] That's happening in Angola.
[189] That's happening in Pakistan.
[190] That's happening around the world.
[191] Paul, what do you make of this global spread of surveillance starting in China?
[192] What does it tell you about the changes you've seen in China in recent years and where all this is headed?
[193] It tells me that I think the Chinese government believes it has created a different model and a new model and they want to propagate it.
[194] They want to spread it and they want to give other countries the ability to do what they've done and in that way influence the world.
[195] So this is, you know, governance by data, governance by mass surveillance is in a way the Chinese model now and they want to bring it to the world.
[196] And what this encourages is authoritarianism because it uses technology unapologetically to consolidate power by understanding what everybody's doing and where they are at any given moment.
[197] And I think it's a kind of important moment for democracies like the United States because they need to kind of recognize this is happening but also say, well, what does the United States stand for and all this?
[198] Do they stand for data collection as well without telling anybody?
[199] Do you stand for something else?
[200] Because the United States at this point is sort of so lost in its own debate.
[201] debates.
[202] Right.
[203] So do we stand in contrast to that?
[204] Right.
[205] Exactly.
[206] And that's the thing as I write about this from China.
[207] It's kind of unclear where the United States stands and all of it.
[208] In a world where this model that you're describing is spreading around the world, how exactly does China benefit from that?
[209] Because there are fewer and fewer places where a democratic government without surveillance challenges it.
[210] I think the idea is if you give the people you're dealing with these systems, you increase their power.
[211] means the people you're dealing with are more likely to keep dealing with you and be the ones in power, you know?
[212] new alternative to the messy democracies of the past.
[213] Governance by data.
[214] Governance by data and surveillance.
[215] Paul, thank you very much.
[216] Thanks.
[217] On Sunday, the Times reported that the Trump administration has decided not to confront China over its repressive treatment of the Uyghurs for fear that it could disrupt the final stages of a major trade deal between the two countries.
[218] The administration had considered imposing economic sanctions on Chinese officials involved in the repression, but has since backed away from that plan.
[219] In part two, we'll hear from one U .S. who is trying to fight for his family in the camps in China.
[220] We'll be right back.
[221] Here's what else you need to know today.
[222] On Sunday, fighting between Israel and Gaza, escalated into the worst combat since the full -blown war between them in 2014.
[223] Four Israeli civilians were killed by Palestinian rocket and missile attacks, prompting Israel to take aim at individual militants in Gaza, killing at least nine of them, and as many civilians.
[224] During a news conference, Israel's Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, promised massive attacks against the militants in Gaza.
[225] The Palestinian rocket attacks mostly struck civilian targets in southern Israel with no military value, including a building that houses a kindergarten and the oncology department of a medical center.
[226] The violence is the latest in a long -running series of clashes that have produced temporary ceasefires that are quickly broken.
[227] And President Trump on Sunday said that special counsel Robert Mueller should not testify before Congress, setting up another confrontation with congressional Democrats who have requested Mueller's appearance.
[228] In a tweet, the president said that Mueller's report was conclusive and that Americans do not need to hear from him again.
[229] No redos for the dams, he wrote.
[230] Because Mueller was appointed by the Department of Justice, which answers to the president, it appears that Trump has the authority to prevent Mueller from testify.
[231] That's it for the daily.
[232] I'm Michael Barbaro.
[233] See tomorrow.