As the United Nations concluded, the homeland of the Uighurs became a no-rights zone for Uighurs. Every 50 metres there are checkpoints—at the entrance to every mall, every bus stop. To get to the bus stop you have to go through an X-ray.
Even within your home, inside or outside, you have to accept installation of security cameras or some kind of recording devices.
For the past two years, the Chinese government has forcefully taken blood samples of Uighurs for DNA sequencing, iris scanning, blood samples, fingerprints, voice recognition and voice data collection.
All Uighurs are basically criminalized. There is no movement from one neighbourhood to another. Currently in some areas in the southern part of East Turkestan, where the majority of Uighurs live, like Kashgar, which is my hometown, and Khotan, the area is completely sealed and, according to Radio Free Asia, 40% to 80% of Uighurs are already held in concentration camps.
I also have to mention that, according to Adrian Zenz, a German scholar, security spending by China for the Uighur region exceeds overall spending for security in China, just for the Uighur area alone. You can see the security control, motion control and movement control of Uighurs from A to Z by using modern technology.