If true, it would be the latest move to tighten surveillance in the heavily-repressed region, where the US State Department has estimated up to two million Muslim-majority Uyghurs are being held in detention camps.
There is a heavy police presence across Xinjiang and security cameras there are a common sight. From 2017, the Chinese government began to collect DNA and biometric data from millions of local residents.
The new joint investigation by organizations, including the Guardian and the New York Times, alleges the crackdown is now affecting visitors and tourists to the region. CNN has not been able to independently verify the report.
Asked about the app Wednesday, the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs said they had "never heard of (it)." CNN has sent a request for comment to the Xinjiang regional government but had not heard back at the time of publishing.
According to media reports, visitors arriving in Xinjiang from neighboring Kyrgyzstan have been forced to unlock their phones for border officials, who then install an application called Fengcai. The name is a combination of the characters for "bee" and "to gather," conjuring the image of a bee gathering pollen from a flower.
People whose phones had been confiscated said they were given no warning of or explanation for the app's installation.
Once installed, the app allegedly scans the device's text messages, call records, contacts, calendar entries and saved data for a list of more than 73,000 red-flag items, according to the reports.
The images and information considered noteworthy by the app include files linked to Islamic extremism, such as ISIS propaganda, and pictures of the Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, according to the reports.
Even scanned pages of an Arabic dictionary are allegedly flagged by the app.
The app was only installed on Android phones, according to the media reports. For Apple devices, police allegedly attached a hand-held device by a USB cable, the purpose of which was unclear.
The app was examined by journalists from a number of international publications, including the Guardian, the New York Times, Motherboard, German newspaper Suddeutsche Zeitung and the German broadcaster NDR.
Xinjiang, the largest region in China with a comparatively small population of 22 million, is home to a variety of minority groups including the predominantly Muslim, Turkic-speaking Uyghurs.
In recent years, authorities have increasingly tightened security in the region in the name of cracking down on Islamic extremism.
But a CNN investigation in May found that people with no history of radicalization were being imprisoned in massive re-education camps.
Although China insists the centers are voluntary "vocational training centers," when CNN attempted to visit them security guards restricted access to the buildings themselves.
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