TikTok apologizes for removing viral video about abuses against Uighurs, blames a “human moderation error”

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
TikTok has issued a public apology to a teenager who had her account suspended shortly after posting a video that asked viewers to research
the persecution of Uighur people and other Muslim groups in Xinjiang
TikTok included a &clarification on the timeline of events,& and said that the viral video was removed four days after it was posted on
November 23 &due to a human moderation error& and did not violate the platform community guidelines (the account @getmefamouspartthree and
video have since been reinstated). But the user, Feroza Aziz, who describes herself in her Twitter profile as &just a Muslim trying to
spread awareness,& rejected TikTok claims, tweeting &Do I believe they took it away because of an unrelated satirical video that was deleted
on a previous deleted account of mine? Right after I finished posting a 3 part video about the Uyghurs? No.& In the video removed by TikTok,
Aziz begins by telling viewers to use an eyelash curler, before telling them to put it down and &use your phone, that you&re using right
now, to search up what happening in China, how they&re getting concentration camps, throwing innocent Muslims in there, separating families
from each other, kidnapping them, murdering them, raping them, forcing them to eat pork, forcing them to drink, forcing them to convert
This is another Holocaust, yet no one is talking about it
Please be aware, please spread awareness in Xinjiang right now.& TikTok is owned by ByteDance and the video removal led to claims that the
Beijing-based company capitulated to pressure from the Chinese Communist Party (Douyin, ByteDance version of TikTok for China, is subject to
the same censorship laws as other online platforms in China). Though the government-directed persecution of Muslim minority groups in China
began several years ago and about a million people are believed to be detained in internment camps, awareness of the crisis was heightened
this month after two significant leaks of classified Chinese government documents were published by the New York Times and the International
Consortium of Investigative Journalists, confirming reports by former inmates, eyewitnesses and researchers. Aziz told BuzzFeed News she has
been talking about the persecution of minority groups in China since 2018 because &as a Muslim girl, I&ve always been oppressed and seen my
people be oppressed, and I&ve always been into human rights.& In the BuzzFeed News article, published before TikTok apology post, the
company claimed Aziz account suspension was related to another video she made that contained an image of Osama Bin Laden
The video was created as a satirical response to a meme about celebrity crushes and Aziz told BuzzFeed News that &it was a dark humor joke
that he was at the end, because obviously no one in their right mind would think or say that.& A TikTok spokesperson said it nonetheless
&violated its policies on terrorism-related content.& &While we recognize that this video may have been intended as satire, our policies on
this front are currently strict
Any such content, when identified, is deemed a violation of our Community Guidelines and Terms of Service, resulting in a permanent ban of
the account and associated devices,& a TikTok spokesperson told BuzzFeed, adding that the suspension of Aziz second account, which the
makeup tutorial video was posted on, was part of the platform blocking of 2,406 devices linked to previously suspended accounts. In TikTok
apology post today, TikTok US head of safety Eric Tan wrote that the platform relies on technology to uphold community guidelines and human
moderators as a &second line of defense.& &We acknowledge that at times, this process will not be perfect
Humans will sometimes make mistakes, such as the one made today in the case of @getmefamouspartthree video,& he added
&When those mistakes happen, however, our commitment is to quickly address and fix them, undertake trainings or make changes to reduce the
risk of the same mistakes being repeated, and fully own the responsibility for our errors.& Aziz told the Washington Post, however, that
&TikTok is trying to cover up this whole mess
I won&t let them get away with this.& The controversy comes as TikTok faces an inquiry by the U.S
government into how it secures the personal data of users
Reuters reported yesterday that TikTok plans to separate its product and business development, and marketing and legal teams from Douyin in
the third quarter of this year.