Detainee says China has secret jail in Dubai, holds Uyghurs
A young Chinese woman says she was held for eight days at a Chinese-run secret detention facility in Dubai along with at least two Uyghurs, in what may be the first evidence that China is operating a so-called “black site” beyond its borders.
The woman, 26-year-old Wu Huan, was
on the run to avoid extradition back to China because her fiancé was considered
a Chinese dissident. Wu told The Associated Press she was abducted from a hotel
in Dubai and detained by Chinese officials at a villa converted into a jail,
where she saw or heard two other prisoners, both Uyghurs.
She was questioned and threatened in
Chinese and forced to sign legal documents incriminating her fiancé for
harassing her, she said. She was finally released on June 8 and is now seeking
asylum in the Netherlands.
While “black sites” are common in
China, Wu’s account is the only testimony known to experts that Beijing has set
one up in another country. Such a site would reflect how China is increasingly
using its international clout to detain or bring back citizens it wants from
overseas, whether they are dissidents, corruption suspects or ethnic minorities
like the Uyghurs.
The AP was unable to confirm or
disprove Wu’s account independently, and she could not pinpoint the exact
location of the black site. However, reporters have seen and heard
corroborating evidence including stamps in her passport, a phone recording of a
Chinese official asking her questions and text messages that she sent from jail
to a pastor helping the couple.
China’s Foreign Ministry denied her
story. “What I can tell you is that the situation the person talked about is
not true,” ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said Monday.
Dubai Police stated Monday that any
claims of a Chinese woman detained by local authorities on behalf of a foreign
country are false, and that Wu freely exited the country with her friend three
months ago.
“Dubai does not detain any foreign nationals
without following internationally accepted procedures and local law enforcement
processes, nor does it allow foreign governments to run any detention centers
within its borders,” said a statement from the Dubai government media office.
“Dubai also follows all recognized global norms and procedures set by
international organizations like Interpol in the detainment, interrogation and
transfer of fugitives sought by foreign governments.”
Black sites are clandestine jails
where prisoners generally are not charged with a crime and have no legal
recourse, with no bail or court order. Many in China are used to stop
petitioners with grievances against local governments, and they often take the
form of rooms in hotels or guesthouses.
Yu-Jie Chen, an assistant professor
at Taiwan’s Academia Sinica, said she had not heard of a Chinese secret jail in
Dubai, and such a facility in another country would be unusual. However, she
also noted that it would be in keeping with China’s attempts to do all it can
to bring select citizens back, both through official means such as signing
extradition treaties and unofficial means such as revoking visas or putting
pressure on family back home.
(China) really wasn’t interested in reaching
out until recent years,” said Chen, who has tracked China’s international legal
actions. “This trend is increasingly robust.”
Chen said Uyghurs in particular were
being extradited or returned to China, which has been detaining the mostly
Muslim minority on suspicion of terrorism even for relatively harmless acts
like praying. The Uyghur Human Rights Project tracked 89 Uyghurs detained or
deported from nine countries from 1997 to 2007 through public reports. That
number steadily increased to reach 1,327 from 20 countries from 2014 until now,
the group found.
Wu and her fiancé, 19-year-old Wang
Jingyu, are not Uyghur but rather Han Chinese, the majority ethnicity in China.
Wang is wanted by China because he posted messages questioning Chinese media
coverage of the Hong Kong protests in 2019 and China’s actions in a border
clash with India.
Along with Uyghurs, China has been
cracking down on perceived dissidents and human rights activists, and has
launched a massive effort to get back suspect officials as part of a national
anti-corruption campaign. Under President Xi Jinping, China’s most
authoritarian leader in decades, Beijing brought back 1,421 people in 2020
alone for alleged corruption and financial crime under Operation Skynet.
However, the AP could not find comprehensive numbers for how many Chinese
citizens overall have been detained or deported from overseas in recent years.
Dubai also has a history as a place
where Uyghurs are interrogated and deported back to China. And activists say
Dubai itself has been linked to secret interrogations involving other
countries. Radha Stirling, a legal advocate who founded the advocacy group
Detained in Dubai, said she has worked with about a dozen people who have
reported being held in villas in the UAE, including citizens of Canada, India
and Jordan but not China.
“There
is no doubt that the UAE has detained people on behalf of foreign governments
with whom they are allied,” Stirling said. “I don’t think they would at all
shrug their shoulders to a request from such a powerful ally.”
However, Patrick Theros, a former
U.S. ambassador to Qatar who is now strategic advisor to the Gulf International
Forum, called the allegations “totally out of character” for the Emiratis.
“They don’t allow allies freedom of movement,”
he said. “The idea that the Chinese would have a clandestine center, it makes
no sense.”
The U.S. State Department had no
comment on Wu’s specific case or on whether there is a Chinese-run black site
in Dubai.
“We
will continue to coordinate with allies and partners to stand against
transnational repression everywhere,” it said in a statement to the AP.
HELD IN A VILLA
Wu, a Chinese millennial with
cropped hair dyed blonde, never cared about politics before. But after her
fiancé was arrested in Dubai on April 5 on unclear charges, she started giving
interviews to media and getting in touch with overseas-based Chinese dissidents
for help.
On May 27, Wu said, she was
questioned by Chinese officials at her hotel, the Element al-Jaddaf, and then
taken by Dubai police to the Bur Dubai police station. Staff for the hotel
declined in a phone interview to confirm her stay or her departure, saying it
was against company policy to disclose information about guests.
She was held for three days at the
police station, she said, with her phone and personal belongings confiscated.
On the third day, she said, a Chinese man who introduced himself as Li Xuhang
came to visit her. He told her he was working for the Chinese consulate in
Dubai, and asked her whether she had taken money from foreign groups to act
against China.
“I
said no, I love China so much. My passport is Chinese. I’m a Chinese person. I
speak Chinese,” she said. “I said, how could I do that?”
Li Xuhang is listed as consul
general on the website of the Chinese consulate in Dubai. The consulate did not
return multiple calls asking for comment and to speak with Li directly.
Wu said Li took her out of the
police station along with another Chinese man who handcuffed her, and they put
her in a black Toyota. There were multiple Chinese people in the car, but Wu
was too scared to get a clear look at their faces.
Her heart thumping, they drove past
an area where many Chinese lived and owned businesses in Dubai called
International City, which Wu recognized from an earlier trip to Dubai.
After driving for half an hour, they
stopped on a deserted street with rows of identical compounds. She was brought inside
a white-colored villa with three stories, where a series of rooms had been
converted into individual cells, she said.
The house was quiet and cold in
contrast with the desert heat. Wu was taken to her own cell, a room which had
been renovated to have a heavy metal door.
There was a bed in her room, a chair
and a white fluorescent light that was on all day and night. The metal door
remained closed except when they fed her.
“Firstly, there’s no sense of time,” Wu said.
“And second, there’s no window, and I couldn’t see if it was day or night.”
Wu said a guard took her to a room
several times where they questioned her in Chinese and threatened that she
would never be allowed to leave. The guards wore face masks all the time.
She saw another prisoner, a Uyghur
woman, while waiting to use the bathroom once, she said. A second time, she
heard a Uyghur woman shouting in Chinese, “I don’t want to go back to China, I
want to go back to Turkey.” Wu identified the women as Uyghurs based on what
she said was their distinctive appearance and accent.
Wu said she was fed twice a day,
with the second meal a stack of plain flatbread. She had to ask the guards for
permission to drink water or go to the bathroom. She was supposed to be allowed
to go the bathroom a maximum of five times a day, Wu said, but that depended on
the mood of the guards.
The guards also gave her a phone and
a SIM card and instructed her to call her fiancé and pastor Bob Fu, the head of
ChinaAid, a Christian non-profit, who was helping the couple.
Wang confirmed to the AP that Wu
called and asked him for his location. Fu said he received at least four or
five calls from her during this time, a few on an unknown Dubai phone number,
including one where she was crying and almost incoherent. She again blamed Wang
and said Fu should not help him.
The AP also reviewed text messages
Wu sent to Fu at the time, which are disjointed and erratic.
“I
could tell she was hiding from telling me her whereabouts,” said Fu. “At that
point we concluded that something has happened to her that prevented her from
even talking.”
Wu said towards the end of her stay,
she refused meals, screamed and cried in an effort to be released. The last thing
her captors demanded of her, she said, was to sign documents in Arabic and
English testifying that Wang was harassing her.
“I was really scared and was forced to sign
the documents,” she told the AP. “I didn’t want to sign them.”
HUB FOR CHINESE INTELLIGENCE
Reports have emerged in recent years
of Emiratis and foreigners being taken to villas, sometimes indefinitely.
Perhaps the best-known case involves
Sheikha Latifa bint Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the daughter of the ruler
of Dubai. Sheikha Latifa tried to flee in 2018 by boat, but was intercepted by
the Indian coast guard in the Arabian Sea and handed back to the UAE.
In videos published by the BBC in
February, she claims she was held against her will in a villa in Dubai.
“I’m
a hostage,” she says in one of the videos. “This villa has been converted into
jail.” A statement since issued on behalf of Sheikha Latifa said she is now
free to travel.
China and the UAE, a federation of
seven sheikhdoms on the Arabian Peninsula, have deep economic and political
ties and also work together on counterintelligence. China ratified an
extradition treaty with the UAE in 2002 and a judicial cooperation treaty in
2008. The UAE was an experimental site for China’s COVID vaccines and
cooperated with China on making tests.
Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan,
the crown prince of Abu Dhabi and de facto ruler of the UAE, has said he was
willing to work with China to “jointly strike against terrorist extremist
forces”, including the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, a militant group
Beijing has accused of fostering Uyghur separatism. In late 2017 and early
2018, local authorities arrested and deported at least five Uyghurs to China,
according to four friends and relatives who spoke by phone with the AP.
In one case, a long-time UAE
resident, Ahmad Talip, was called in for questioning at a local police station
and detained, according to his wife, Amannisa Abdullah, who is now in Turkey.
In another case, eight plainclothes officers broke into a hotel room and
arrested a 17-year-old boy who had just fled a police raid in Egypt.
The detentions were carried out by
Arabs who appeared to be UAE police, not Chinese agents, the Uyghurs said.
However, one of the detainees, Huseyin Imintohti, was sought by three Chinese
agents at a Uyghur restaurant in Dubai before his deportation, according to his
wife, Nigare Yusup.
Another Uyghur detainee, Yasinjan
Memtimin, was interrogated twice by people in the UAE who appeared to be
Chinese police, said his wife, who declined to be named out of fear of
retribution. She said she had heard from a Uyghur who fled overseas of a
detention facility in the UAE where Uyghurs were detained and interrogated, but
she could not offer more details.
The UAE appears to be a hub for
Chinese intelligence on Uyghurs in the Middle East, former Uyghur residents
told The AP. A Uyghur linguist, Abduweli Ayup, said he had spoken with three
Uyghurs coerced into working as spies in Turkey who passed through Dubai to
pick up SIM cards and cash and meet Chinese agents.
Jasur Abibula, a former Xinjiang
government worker, also told the AP that Chinese state security lured him from
the Netherlands to the UAE in 2019 after his ex-wife, Asiye Abdulaheb, obtained
confidential documents on internment camps in Xinjiang. He was greeted by a
dozen or so people working for the Chinese government in Dubai, he said,
including at least two who introduced themselves as working for China’s
Ministry of State Security.
One, a Uyghur man in his fifties who
gave his name as Dolet, said he was stationed in Dubai. The other, a Han
Chinese man who spoke fluent Uyghur, said he was on a mission to uncover the
source of the leaks, according to Abibula.
The agents presented Abibula with a
USB and asked him to insert it in his ex-wife’s computer. They offered him
money, put him up in a Hilton resort and bought toys for his kids. They also
threatened him, showing him a video of his mother back in China. On a drive
through dunes of sand, one said it reminded him of the deserts back in
Xinjiang.
“If
we kill and bury you here, nobody will able to find your body,” he recalled
them telling him. Abibula is now back in the Netherlands, where the AP spoke to
him by phone, and he sent photos of some of the agents, his hotel and his plane
ticket to support his claims.
Besides the UAE, many other
countries have cooperated with China in sending Uyghurs back. In 2015, Thailand
repatriated over 100 Uyghurs to China. In 2017, Egyptian police detained
hundreds of Uyghur students and residents and sent them back as well.
Rodney Dixon, a London-based rights
lawyer representing Uyghur groups, said his team has filed a case against
Tajikistan in the International Criminal Court, accusing local authorities of
aiding China in deporting Uyghurs.
China isn’t the first country to
hunt people deemed terror suspects outside its borders. After 9/11, the U.S.
government also operated and controlled a network of CIA clandestine detention
facilities overseas in countries including Thailand, Lithuania and Romania. The
CIA’s detention and interrogation program ended in 2009.
“I’M
AFRAID TO CALL YOU”
After Wu was released, she was taken
back to the same hotel she had stayed at and given her personal belongings. She
immediately reached out to Fu, apologized for her past calls and asked for
help, in text messages seen by the AP.
“I’m
afraid to call you,” she told Fu in one message. “I’m afraid I will be
overheard.”
On June 11, she flew out of Dubai to
Ukraine, where she was reunited with Wang.
After threats from Chinese police
that Wang could face extradition from Ukraine, the couple fled again to the
Netherlands. Wu said she misses her homeland.
“I’ve
discovered that the people deceiving us are Chinese, that it’s our countrymen
hurting our own countrymen,” she said. “That is the situation.”