Pakistani men wait for news of Uygur wives amid sweeping Chinese crackdown in Xinjiang
- Scores of Pakistani citizens left searching for answers after their spouses were detained by the Chinese authorities

The last time Chaudhry Javed Atta saw his wife was over a year ago – the Pakistani trader in dried and fresh produce was leaving their home in northwestern China’s heavily Muslim Xinjiang region to go back to his country to renew his visa.
He remembers the last thing she told him: “As soon as you leave, they will take me to the camp and I will not come back.”
That was August, 2017. By then, Atta and Amina Manaji, a member of the Uygur ethnic group, had been married for 14 years.
Atta is one of scores of Pakistani businessmen – and he says there are more than 200 – whose spouses have disappeared, taken to what Chinese authorities tell them are education centres.
Beijing has been accused of interning members of its Muslim population – by some reports as many as 1 million – to “re-educate” them away from their faith. It is seen as a response to riots and violent attacks that the government blamed on separatists.
“They call them schools, but they are prisons,” Atta said. “They can’t leave.”