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ChinaPolitics

Beijing laying groundwork for mass DNA testing in Xinjiang

Police buying US$8.7 million worth of new sampling equipment, which observers say could be used to tighten security crackdown

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Wanted posters for suspects in terror attacks are seen in this image from 2014 of a street in Aksu, Xinjiang province. Photo: AP
Associated Press

China appears to be laying the groundwork for the mass collection of DNA samples from residents of Xinjiang, a largely Muslim region already under a security crackdown, rights observers and independent analysts said on Tuesday.

Police in Xinjiang confirmed they are in the process of purchasing at least US$8.7 million in equipment to analyse DNA samples.

Observers from Human Rights Watch said they had seen evidence of almost US$3 million worth of additional purchases related to DNA testing. They warned that such a collection programme could be used as a way to increase political control.

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Ethnic Uygurs at a food stall in Kashgar in Xinjiang in 2008. Billboards for the Beijing Olympics can be seen in the background. Photo: AP
Ethnic Uygurs at a food stall in Kashgar in Xinjiang in 2008. Billboards for the Beijing Olympics can be seen in the background. Photo: AP

The move comes after Chinese authorities last year reportedly required Xinjiang residents to submit DNA samples, fingerprints and voice records to obtain passports or travel abroad.

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If used at full capacity, the new equipment could be used to profile up to 10,000 DNA samples a day and several million a year, said Yves Moreau, a computational biologist specialising in genome analysis and DNA privacy at the University of Leuven in Belgium.

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