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    https://n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/658 content_copy
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    Xinjiang Documentation Project. (1970, January 1). Two-faced people: 两面人 (Liǎngmiàn rén). Glossary of Terminology, Xinjiang Documentation Project Archive, Arts Digital Collections, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. https://n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/658 Xinjiang Documentation Project. Two-faced people: 两面人 (Liǎngmiàn rén). Glossary of Terminology, Xinjiang Documentation Project Archive, Arts Digital Collections, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. January 1, 1970. https://n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/658 Xinjiang Documentation Project. Two-faced people: 两面人 (Liǎngmiàn rén). Glossary of Terminology, Xinjiang Documentation Project Archive, Arts Digital Collections, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. 1 Jan. 1970. n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/658
  • Title: Two-faced people: 两面人 (Liǎngmiàn rén)
  • Audio:
  • Description: This is an audio recording of how to pronounce 两面人 (Liǎngmiàn rén). Originally a term used by Chinese Communist Party to rectify Party members who show disloyalty and are critical of the Party’s policies. Since 2017 in Xinjiang, the Party has waged a campaign to fight against “two-faced people” within the Party. The arrested and disappeared “two-faced people” are mostly Uyghur intellectuals, Party officials, and members, who allegedly “exhibited nationalist sentiment” and thus suspected of being an obstacle in the Party’s fight against terrorism, separatism, and religious extremism.
  • Creator: Xinjiang Documentation Project
  • Contributor: Xinjiang Documentation Project
  • Publisher: Xinjiang Documentation Project
  • Language:
  • Format: MP3
  • Keywords: key terms
  • Item Type: Sound File
  • Collection: Glossary of Terminology
    • Additional Details
    • Description: This is an audio recording of how to pronounce 两面人 (Liǎngmiàn rén). Originally a term used by Chinese Communist Party to rectify Party members who show disloyalty and are critical of the Party’s policies. Since 2017 in Xinjiang, the Party has waged a campaign to fight against “two-faced people” within the Party. The arrested and disappeared “two-faced people” are mostly Uyghur intellectuals, Party officials, and members, who allegedly “exhibited nationalist sentiment” and thus suspected of being an obstacle in the Party’s fight against terrorism, separatism, and religious extremism.