teensexonline.com
38.1 C
Jammu
Monday, April 21, 2025
HomeChinaHuman Rights Watch Reports Intensified Digital Surveillance of Tibetans by Chinese Authorities

Human Rights Watch Reports Intensified Digital Surveillance of Tibetans by Chinese Authorities

Date:

Related stories

Anti-canals strike across Sindh

The province-wide blockade of the highways continued on Sunday...

Thousands of protesters rally against Trump across US

In USA, thousands of protesters took to the streets...

India’s forex market doubles in last four years from 32 billion to 60 billion dollars

RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra has stated that  India’s forex...

Russia, Ukraine accuse each other of violating Easter truce

The Russian Defence Ministry on Sunday claimed that it...

More than 60 people in Tibetan areas of China have been arrested since 2021 for offenses connected to phone and internet use, according to the nonprofit Human Rights Watch.

The dozens of arrests — which are likely an undercount since the government does not publish data on such prosecutions or detentions — coincide with a tightening surveillance regime throughout Tibet.

“For Tibetans, simply using a cellphone has become dangerous, and everyday activities like posting a humorous video or contacting loved ones abroad can bring arrest, detention, and torture,” said Maya Wang, associate China director at Human Rights Watch. “Tibetans, particularly those living in remote areas, once celebrated the arrival of cellphones so they could stay in touch with friends and family, but their phones have effectively become government tracking devices.”

Many of the arrests have involved the possession of outlawed content on phones, such as material related to Tibetan religious figures. In 2022, the government banned the sharing online of all religious content not authorized by the government.

That year, a man was arrested for creating a WeChat group “without permission” of authorities to celebrate the birthdays of elder Buddhist monks.

People have also been arrested for the sharing of content on social media that promotes the Tibetan language and opposes recent policy changes to require the use of Mandarin in classrooms. They have also reportedly been detained for any correspondence with people outside the country, including family members.

Beginning in 2021, Chinese police reportedly began conducting mass phone searches in parts of Tibet, resulting in large-scale detentions for “political education.”

Authorities often scour residents’ social media  in response to sensitive events, researchers said, such as protests in Sichuan province against the construction of a dam in 2024, when police reportedly searched WeChat and TikTok accounts for evidence of sharing videos of protests or of communicating with the outside world.

One alleged method for tracking the population is a compulsory app purportedly for combating fraud that Tibetans have been forced by police to download. The application was found by the Tibet advocacy research network Turquoise Roof to grant “access to sensitive user data or control over key device functionalities, allowing for highly invasive surveillance.”

The Chinese government has used similar intensive surveillance tactics on other minority populations that it considers a threat politically, like the Uyghurs in Xinjiang province.

Last week, Tibet’s government-in-exile called for a probe into the death of an influential 56-year-old Buddhist leader who reportedly fled to Vietnam last September to escape from authorities. Human rights groups allege he was arrested in Ho Chi Minh City in late March and died in Chinese custody three days later.

Latest stories