TikTok says sorry to US teenager blocked after sharing Xinjiang videos | Technology


TikTok has apologised for blocking a US teenager from the Chinese-owned video sharing platform after she posted videos highlighting Beijing’s treatment of Muslims in Xinjiang.

A spokesman for the platform on Thursday blamed a “human moderation error” for the removal of a video by 17-year-old Feroza Aziz disguised as a makeup tutorial to avoid being censored.

The Uighurs are a predominantly Muslim Turkic-speaking ethnic group, primarily from China’s northwestern region of Xinjiang. They have been subject to religious and ethnic persecution by Chinese authorities, with rights groups claiming that in recent years more than 1 million people have been held in detention camps. 

Having initially denied the existence of the camps, China has described them as “vocational education centres” in the face of mounting evidence in the form of government documents, satellite imagery and testimonies from escaped detainees. Satellite images have also suggested that more than two dozen Islamic religious sites have been partly or completely demolished since 2016.

In July 2019 China claimed that most of the people sent to the mass detention centres have “returned to society”, but this has been disputed by relatives of those detained. Around 1-1.5m Uighur are estimated to live overseas as a diaspora, many of whom have campaigned against the treatment of their families.  

Martin Belam

In the short clip, Aziz curls her eyelashes while calling on viewers to “spread awareness” of what is happening in Xinjiang, where the Chinese government has been accused of sending at least 1 million Uighurs and other minorities to internment camps.


The video was viewed more than 1.5 million times but Aziz was blocked from posting any more videos.

In a statement acknowledging the “significant interest and confusion” in Aziz’s case, Eric Han, head of safety at TikTok US, said: “Due to a human moderation error, the viral video … was removed. It’s important to clarify that nothing in our community guidelines precludes content such as this video, and it should not have been removed.”

Han said the company had previously banned an account by Aziz after she posted a satirical video about the prospect of marrying Osama bin Laden. As part of “scheduled platform-wide enforcement”, her second account was suspended a few days after she posted her makeup tutorial.

“Our moderation approach of banning devices associated with a banned account is designed to protect against the spread of coordinated malicious behaviour – and it’s clear that this was not the intent here,” Han said, adding that the company had contacted Aziz to tell her that her account had been reinstated.

Han said the company was reviewing the “procedural breakdown” in this incident and would be releasing a “transparency report” as well as a fuller version of its community moderation guidelines.

Aziz posted on Twitter that her account had been unblocked but cast doubt on the company’s explanations. She wrote: “Do I believe they took it away because of a unrelated satirical video that was deleted on a previous deleted account of mine? Right after I finished posting a 3-part video about the Uighurs? No.”

Aziz’s video and accusations of censorship come at a time when the Chinese leadership is facing international condemnation for its policies in Xinjiang, which China defends as counter-terrorism measures.

Several recent high-profile leaks detailing the use of involuntary internment camps for “ideological education” have undermined Beijing’s claims that it only hosts “vocational training centres” that people attend willingly.

Owned by the Beijing-based technology company ByteDance, TikTok is one of few Chinese apps that have gained popularity outside of China. TikTok has said that it does not apply Chinese censorship rules on the international version of its app.

Uighurs within China and those overseas have previously used Douyin, the app’s domestic version, to communicate or raise awareness of the situation but those accounts appear to have been scrubbed from the platform.

Leaked moderation guidelines seen by the Guardian barred content related to certain world leaders, Tiananmen Square, Tibetan independence and Falun Gong.

It did not mention Xinjiang specifically, but barred “highly controversial topics, such as separatism, religion sects conflicts, conflicts between ethnic groups, for instance exaggerating the Islamic sects conflicts”.




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