Xinjiang: Ex-Blackwater chief's security firm linked to China training centre

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Image copyrightGetty ImagesImage caption Erik Prince, seen here in Washington DC in 2017, says he has "no knowledge" of
the deal A security firm founded by ex-Blackwater chief Erik Prince has signed a preliminary deal to build a training centre
in China's Xinjiang region, according to a company statement.Hong Kong-listed Frontier Services Group (FSG) announced the deal on its
website in a now deleted post.Blackwater guards hired by the US played a controversial role in Iraq.Xinjiang has recently been the focus of
a security crackdown that has seen mass detentions of Uighur Muslims.China has defended its use of internment camps in Xinjiang, describing
them as "vocational training centres" that it says are proving effective in staving off terrorism through "thought transformation".But it
has come under international criticism for allegedly having held up to a million people
Private firm FSG already provides security training services to companies based in China, as well as a number of Chinese companies that
operate overseas, particularly in Africa
In a statement posted on its Chinese-language website on 22 January, FSG said one of its subsidiaries had signed a deal for a "training
centre" with the Kashgar Caohu industrial park in Xinjiang.On Friday, an FSG spokesman told AFP news agency that Mr Prince had "no knowledge
or involvement whatsoever" of the announced preliminary agreement.The spokesman added that any such investment or deal would require the
approval of all FSG board members
Mr Prince, who is a minority shareholder in the company and also a board member, is a former US Navy Seal and the brother of US Education
Secretary Betsy DeVos
He sold Blackwater - which was re-named Xe Services and later Academi - to a group of investors in 2010
In 2014, four former Blackwater guards were convicted on murder and manslaughter charges in the US and jailed the following year over the
killing of 14 unarmed Iraqi civilians in Baghdad in 2007.They had claimed they were under fire from insurgents as they escorted a diplomatic
convoy, but a court in Washington DC found them guilty of an unprovoked attack.The firefight ignited an international debate over the role
of defence contractors and strained US-Iraq relations.Image copyrightGetty ImagesImage caption Uighurs are ethnically
Turkic Muslims mostly based in Xinjiang China's massive security crackdown in Xinjiang has sparked widespread alarm.Rights
groups say Uighurs and other Muslim minorities are being detained indefinitely without charge for infractions like refusing to give a DNA
sample, speaking in a minority language or arguing with officials.China denies the allegations, insisting that its actions are necessary to
prevent terrorism.Uighurs, ethnically Turkic Muslims who make up about 45% of the population in Xinjiang, see themselves as culturally and
ethnically close to Central Asian nations, and their language is similar to Turkish.In recent decades, large numbers of Han Chinese (China's
ethnic majority) have migrated to Xinjiang, and the Uighurs feel their culture and livelihoods are under threat.Xinjiang is officially
designated as an autonomous region within China, like Tibet to its south.