Tag: Uyghur

  • Rights groups blast UN for inaction on Uyghur repression

    Rights groups blast UN for inaction on Uyghur repression

    The report made 13 recommendations to the Chinese government, including promptly releasing those detained arbitrarily in camps, prisons or other facilities…reports Asian Lite news

    Human rights groups criticised the UN for failing to take concrete action against China for its repression of Uyghurs in Xinjiang, saying the international body has done little since releasing a damning report a year ago stating that Chinese may have committed crimes against humanity against the mostly Muslim group, the media reported.

    The report issued on August 31, 2022, by former UN High Commissioner of Human Rights Michelle Bachelet highlighted “serious human rights violations” in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region amid what Beijing has described as steps to counter terrorism and religious extremism, the RFA reported.

    The report made 13 recommendations to the Chinese government, including promptly releasing those detained arbitrarily in camps, prisons or other facilities, the RFA reported.

    But the current UN human rights czar, Volker Turk, “hasn’t really been pursuing these recommendations as he has repeatedly promised”, said Maya Wang, associate director in the Asia division at Human Rights Watch, or HRW.

    Turk has said he would personally engage with Chinese authorities and has acknowledged the need for concrete follow-up on the report’s conclusions, but he has not yet briefed the U.N. Human Rights Council on the report or on his office’s monitoring of the situation in Xinjiang, HRW said in a statement Thursday, RFA reported.

    China’s clout at the United Nations makes taking action difficult, Wang acknowledged.

    “It’s not due to a lack of interest or commitment, but more because, realistically, the Chinese government is a really big player at the UN and has over the last years, become increasingly powerful,” she said. 

    “There are just realistic difficulties in holding a very powerful government accountable.” 

    Wang said many other governments have not prioritised holding the Chinese government to account for its crimes because of their heavy trade and business ties with the country, RFA reported.

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  • London’s lesser-known unique and amazing flavours of Uyghur cuisine: Dilara Restaurant 

    London’s lesser-known unique and amazing flavours of Uyghur cuisine: Dilara Restaurant 

    Dilara is one of the few Uyghur restaurants across London. Uyghur cuisine is the cuisine of the Uyghur people, which are mainly situated in the autonomous region of Xinjiang. The cuisine is characterized by a blend of northern Chinese dishes like noodles and dumplings, and Turkish dishes but with Uyghur spiced kebabs, meats, bread and rice dishes. A feature by FnB columnist Riccha Grrover for Asian Lite International.

    Dilara on Blackstock road near Finsbury Park hood is a buzzing, popular, well lit must-visit restaurant, with big plates of food on its menu meant for sharing with friends, families or foodies all digging in with gusto! Lamb dishes feature heavily across the menu. 

    All the products they use in the kitchen and restaurant comes directly from the producers daily, and they prepare their dough by hand in front of their customers. They use traditional methods of cooking to reveal hidden authentic flavors and use the highest quality, organic products.

    Unique tasting salty well done lamb skewers are popular, these are cooked in an open kitchen and some other dishes on a charcoal grill, this surely fills Dilara eating in vibe with warm and appetising aromas. The food comes hot as cooked fresh and looks appetising from the minute it arrives with its hearty presentation and generous portions. 

    The signature tugure dumplings made lamb and onions, are filling, which are meant to be a best-seller are surely delectable and fragrant with its side dipping chilli sauce that is next level amazing for those who can handle a slight kick! Their handmade flat noodles drowned in a spicy broth with chicken and potatoes is one of their well known and most ordered sharing dishes and indeed it is top notch in taste, flavours and spicing.

    The vibe is casual and relaxed in this no-frills but amazing food jaunt serving Uyghur food, the service is very helpful and not rushed, the servers are knowledgeable and even the owner is around to help give suggestions helpfully on what to order based on preferences and explains patiently about the cuisine and details of various dishes they offer. The do delivery, takeaways too but the charm is eating their freshly made cuisine in the cosy restaurant and seeing all the diners tucking into the same dishes as each dish as cooked arrives at the same time for all who ordered it, exudes quite a comforting communal vibe. Highly Recommended! 

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  • Uyghur girls endure abuse, forced labour in garment factory

    Uyghur girls endure abuse, forced labour in garment factory

    Workers at the plant, which employs roughly a dozen women in their 30s and 40s as well as some men, are not allowed to leave….reports Asian Lite News

    Nearly 90 Uyghur teenage girls are locked up in a Chinese-run garment factory in Xinjiang, where they are forced to work heavily 14 hours a day, seven days a week, and regularly face verbal and physical abuse, an investigation by Radio Free Asia (RFA) has found.

    According to four sources, quoted by RFA including a village chief and the factory’s security chief, the Wanhe Garment Co Ltd in Maralbeshi county has a secret agreement with the nearby Yarkant 2nd Vocational High School under which female students aged 16 to 18 are sent to work at the factory against their will. Local authorities have pressed parents not to object to their children working at the plant, according to the village chief, a woman in charge of persuading the parents to let the girls go.

    Workers at the plant, which employs roughly a dozen women in their 30s and 40s as well as some men, are not allowed to leave.

    These girls are forced to sleep in dormitories on the factory compound. Most are Uyghurs, but only 15 are Chinese who came from somewhere else to work at the factory.

    A village official said that the girls are kept in line by a middle-aged Uyghur woman named Tursungul Memtimin, whom the girls call “teacher.” She regularly insults and criticises these girls, and sometimes also hit them with a bat, as per RFA.

    “The ‘teacher’ is known to have a very bad temper. She physically assaults the workers using a bat as a means of inflicting harm,” she said.

    “The workers live in fear of her, and due to this intimidating environment, no one dares to make an escape,” the official told RFA.

    The revelation comes amid rising evidence of Uyghur forced labour in Xinjiang, as well as suspicions that forced labour is exploited in large corporations’ supply lines.

    Inditex, the parent company of Zara and Uniqlo, as well as carmakers Volkswagen, Mercedes-Benz, and BMW, have all come under increasing scrutiny to verify that they are not utilising Uyghur forced labour.

    The Uyghur Forced Labour Prevention Act, passed into law in December 2021, requires American enterprises who import goods from Xinjiang to demonstrate that they were not produced using Uyghur forced labour at any level of production. (ANI)

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  • ‘Uyghur persecution in China alarming’

    ‘Uyghur persecution in China alarming’

    On the Chinese atrocities on Uyghur minorities, Michael Levitt, writing in the Toronto Star said that world attention on the plight of the Uyghur has somewhat decreased…reports Asian Lite News

    The Communist Party of China (CPC) has expanded its repression of the Uyghur in recent years, which includes limiting their freedom of expression, speech, religion, and freedom to move around, Voices Against Autocracy reported.

    Several media reports have underlined the persecution of Uyghurs as the most horrifying crime against humanity in China. Since 2017, the Chinese government has incarcerated over a million Uyghurs in “re-education camps” and subjected those who have not been detained to rigorous monitoring, religious restrictions, forced labour, and forcible sterilisation, according to Voices Against Autocracy.

    It has been regarded as “the largest incarceration of a minority group since the Holocaust” by Western researchers.

    A UN Human Rights Office assessment released last year indicated “patterns of torture or other forms of cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment” in the camps. The vast majority of those incarcerated in the camps were never charged and had no legal recourse to protest their confinement.

    According to a recent Al Jazeera report (released on 4 May 2023) citing a Human Rights Watch (HRW) forensic investigation, Chinese authorities have monitored the phones of the ethnic minority Uyghur for the presence of 50,000 known multimedia files that were used to flag what China views as extremism, with the mere possession of the Quran triggering a police interrogation.

    Notably, China also continues to utilise its considerable influence to influence UN processes and ensure that its partners avoid publicly acknowledging Uyghur oppression.

    Following the release of the report of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) voted down a motion by the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom to convene a debate on human rights abuses in Xinjiang in October 2022, just the second time in sixteen years reported Voices Against Autocracy.

    On the Chinese atrocities on Uyghur minorities, Michael Levitt, writing in the Toronto Star said that world attention on the plight of the Uyghur has somewhat decreased.

    He concludes his case by noting that the oppression of Uyghurs in China is one of the most heinous crimes against humanity.

    According to the US State Department’s annual report on religious freedom around the world violations of human rights in China and Iran have become a major cause of concern in recent times.

    US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that most oppressive nations around the world are growing even more dire. “Governments in many parts of the world continue to target religious minorities using a host of methods, including torture, beatings, unlawful surveillance, and so-called re-education camps,” he said.

    Blinken underscored abuses against the predominately Muslim Uyghur minority group in the Xinjiang province of China, a country one senior State Department official described as “one of the worst abusers of human rights and religious freedom in the world.”

    The report accused Beijing of jailing as many as 10,000 or more people in 2022 in a widening campaign of repression against religious belief meant to bring all theological activity under the Chinese Communist Party’s control.

    The estimate of those imprisoned in the country ranging “from the low thousands to over 10,000” is one of many contained in the State Department’s International Religious Freedom Report.

    The US has previously determined that Beijing’s treatment of the Uyghurs amounts to genocide and crimes against humanity, and the report, which covers the year 2022, said that persecution has continued steadily. (ANI)

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  • China labels Uyghurs ‘violent extremists’ for possession of the Quran

    China labels Uyghurs ‘violent extremists’ for possession of the Quran

    Even owning a copy of the Quran can result in a police probe against the person in China…reports Asian Lite News

    The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) authorities spy on the phones of ethnic Uyghurs, a minority, predominately Muslim Turkic-speaking population in the Xinjiang Province, to identify content that the government deems radical, according to a new report by Human Rights Watch, The Organisation for World Peace (OWP) reported.

    Even owning a copy of the Quran can result in a police probe against the person, according to the 50,000 multimedia files that are used as a guide to flag information as encouraging extremism. This list, which is used by the CCP government, includes not only “violent and terrorist” material like video, photos, and audio created by terrorist organisations like ISIL, but also any material from groups calling for the identity and self-determination of the minority Muslim Uyghur population in the Xinjiang province.

    This list specifically targets material about the Tiananmen Square Massacre, readings from the Quran, religious hymns, and a travel show called “On the Road” that was filmed in Syria, according to Human Rights Watch’s metadata analysis, according to OWP.

    OWP quoted Al Jazeera, stating that the list that Human Rights Watch examined is a portion of 52 GB of material taken from a Xinjian police database and released to Intercept in 2019.

    Human Rights Watch claims that the Chinese police have ordered Xinjiang province citizens to download the Jingwang Weishi app, which enables law enforcement to check the contents of people’s phones.

    Chinese police conducted 11.2 million searches on the phones of more than 1 million residents, and HRW examined 1000 files from those searches and discovered that 57 per cent of the content identified as radical was just religious content.

    Human Rights Watch’s recent revelation has confirmed to the world community the severity of the religious persecution suffered by Muslim minorities in China and the urgent need to look into the government’s violent crackdown on minority groups in the far-western province of Xinjiang, as per a report published in OWP.

    The CCP authorities have denied any claims of mistreatment, asserting that the US and the West are peddling an anti-China narrative, while also resorting to harassing activists and preventing the UNHCR from publishing a report on this issue, according to the CFR. This is despite the fact that China has been the target of growing international criticism and protests regarding its crackdown on Uyghurs.

    In general, the CCP governments have been under pressure from the international community for many years, but to little avail. Due to their economic links and reliance on China, many nations, including some of China’s Muslim allies like Pakistan, have been reluctant to criticise China’s atrocities.

    Human Rights Watch’s report has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that Chinese authorities target anyone who merely tries to practise their religion. This is a serious issue that the international community needs to confront China into changing its attitude toward its minorities, reported OWP. (ANI)

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  • Uyghurs’ plight overlooked, says alarming report

    Uyghurs’ plight overlooked, says alarming report

    In recent years, the CCP has increased its repression of the Uyghurs, which many experts denounce as genocidal….reports Asian Lite News

    Uyghurs continue to be persecuted by Chinese authorities but people are paying less attention to this extreme human rights violation which is making the situation “disturbing,” Michael Levitt wrote in Toronto Star.

    The writer believes that the world’s indifference, inaction and silence towards the persecution of Uyghurs can be deadly for the victims. According to the leaked top-secret intelligence assessment from the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) on Chinese government foreign interference in Canada, CSIS “has taken specific actions to target Canadian MPs,” (notably Conservative MP Michael Chong), linked to the February 2021 parliamentary vote condemning Beijing’s oppression of Uyghurs and other Turkic minorities.

    During the last Parliament, while serving as an MP and chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee, the writer repeatedly raised the issue of the Uyghurs and advocated imposing Magnitsky sanctions to hold gross human rights abusers, like China, to account.

    Already notorious for widespread human rights abuses in Tibet and Hong Kong, Chinese dictator President Xi Jinping and the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) are doubtless delighted the minority it persecutes most — the Uyghurs — receives short shrift from foreign journalists and politicians.

    A mainly Muslim, Turkic-speaking minority group in China, the Uyghurs have long suffered from the CCP’s discriminatory actions. Numbering around 10 million, they live in the country’s northwestern province, known officially as Xinjiang, Levitt wrote in Toronto Star.

    In recent years, the CCP has increased its repression of the Uyghurs, which many experts denounce as genocidal. It includes state-imposed restrictions on religious freedom, language rights, cultural expression and freedom of movement.

    Since 2017, the Chinese government has detained more than a million Uyghurs in what it calls “re-education camps” and subjected those not detained to extensive surveillance, religious restrictions, forced labour and involuntary sterilization.

    Using satellite images, individual testimonies and leaked Chinese government documents, researchers have documented the CCP’s vicious campaign, describing it as “the largest incarceration of a minority group since the Holocaust.” A sobering reference if ever there was one.

    Last year, a UN Human Rights office report revealed “patterns of torture or other forms of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment” in the camps.

    The writer also recalled his webinar, which was organized last week, highlighting the Uyghur genocide. In the webinar, when the “re-education camp” survivors gave their testimony, they were “Zoom bombed” multiple times in an attempt to silence their voices.

    According to the Uyghur Rights Advocacy Project (URAP), our event co-host, such harassment is commonplace when courageous Uyghurs share their horrific experiences.

    If the post-Holocaust vow of “Never Again” still stands for something, it should be updated to “Never Again Now.”

    The writer requests people to use all means at our disposal — economic, diplomatic, and cultural — to step up pressure against China to end its genocidal persecution of the Uyghurs. (ANI)

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  • Uyghur asylum seekers face grim fate in Thailand’s detention centers

    Uyghur asylum seekers face grim fate in Thailand’s detention centers

    The refugee, 40-year-old Mattohti Mattursun, died last Friday after being taken to the hospital due to liver and respiratory problems…reports Asian Lite News

    An Uyghur refugee, who was detained by Thai authorities in 2014 while fleeing persecution in China, died last week after spending nine years in detention, Uyghur rights groups say, the Vice reported.

    The refugee, 40-year-old Mattohti Mattursun, died last Friday after being taken to the hospital due to liver and respiratory problems, according to a statement by the World Uyghur Congress and the Uyghur Human Rights Project. The groups are demanding that the Thai government investigate the living conditions of Uyghur asylum seekers held in the Suan Phlu immigration detention centre in Bangkok.

    His death comes just two months after the death of 49-year-old Aziz Abdullah, another Uyghur asylum seeker who died from reported pneumonia in the same detention centre. Both men were transferred to the centre in July last year, the rights groups said in the statement, the Vice reported.

    Mattohti is the fifth Uyghur asylum seeker to die in Thai detention over the past nine years. In 2018, a 27-year-old man died of cancer at a Thai immigration detention facility after being detained there for four years. Another two Uyghur children died in 2014, according to media reports, including a three-year-old boy suffering from tuberculosis.

    “This tragic death of yet another Uyghur being held in indefinite immigration detention in Bangkok shows the danger of the cramped and outrageously unhygienic conditions these men have faced for almost ten years,” Phil Robertson, Human Rights Watch’s Asia deputy director, told VICE World News.

    “Thailand’s desire for this ‘problematic’ group of Uyghur detainees to go away apparently also includes letting them get sick and die. This wholly negligent, completely inhumane treatment denies them even basic health care,” Robertson said.

    The Chinese government has drastically tightened its control over the country’s Uyghur population since 2014 after Uyghur militants killed 31 in a mass stabbing attack at a train station in southwestern China, the Vice reported.

    Vowing to fight terrorism, Beijing has turned the far-western Chinese region of Xinjiang, where most Uyghurs live, into what rights groups have described as a “dystopian hellscape” and severely curtailed the ethnic and religious identity of Uyghurs, a mostly Muslim Turkic ethnic group.

    As many as a million Uyghurs, Kazakhs and other Muslims in China have been detained in internment camps since 2017, in a series of abuses that the United Nations said could amount to crimes against humanity.

    Thailand is not a signatory to the 1951 Refugee Convention and does not have specific asylum legislation. Consequently, refugees and asylum seekers, including those fleeing persecution in Xinjiang, are routinely arrested and treated as criminals.

    At least 350 Uyghur men, women, and children fleeing China have been arrested upon entering Thailand since 2013. In 2015, 172 of the women and children were resettled in Turkey. But a few weeks later, Thai authorities deported 109 of the group back to China.

    At the time, international rights groups and the United Nations expressed fear that they would be imprisoned or tortured upon their return. Meanwhile, 20 detainees broke out of a detention centre in 2017 by using blankets to scale the wall, the Vice reported.

    Amir, a pseudonym used to protect him from reprisals, spent two years inside Bangkok’s Suan Phlu immigration detention centre, living side-by-side with a group of Uyghurs in 2020. As a refugee himself who is now safely outside the facility, he claims the Uyghur community was treated far worse than all of the other detainees inside for “political reasons”.

    “They were pretty much treated like terrorists,” Amir told VICE World News, adding, “They were not allowed visits, could not receive money, and were not allowed to use mobile phones. Their leaders were punished if immigration authorities found out if they were using a mobile phone.”

    He added that immigration officials would routinely ransack their living space and go through their belongings looking for contraband.

    The two Uyghur rights groups are now calling on the Thai government to release detained Uyghurs immediately and provide them with resettlement choices.

    John Quinley III, director of Fortify Rights, an international human rights watchdog, calls for an “urgent independent investigation” into the deaths at Thailand’s immigration detention centres, which also hold North Korean defectors and Rohingyas from Myanmar, the Vice reported.

    “The Government of Thailand should end the indefinite detention of refugees and migrants,” he told VICE World News, adding that the government should collaborate with civil society organisations and human rights groups to find alternatives to detention.

    In 2017, a Rohingya girl died in an immigration detention centre in southern Thailand. Rights groups said she “died from bleeding in her brain and an alleged blood-clotting disorder.” Her death sparked concern among the refugee rights community about the conditions inside Thailand’s detention centres.

    For years, detainees have also said that they face torture and ill-treatment while inside Thailand’s detention centres. Although the government denies that detainees are abused, the evidence of mistreatment inside continues to mount. (ANI)

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  • Uyghur community alarmed over video of dancer in mosque

    Uyghur community alarmed over video of dancer in mosque

    Uyghurs say such videos are both offensive and part of a wider attempt to diminish or erase their religion and culture…reports Asian Lite News

    A Chinese tourism advertisement portraying a medieval Buddhist fantasy, shot in the prayer hall of Xinjiang’s second-largest mosque, has alarmed the Uyghur diaspora, which is calling it a desecration, a media report said.

    They say it is particularly incensing during Ramadan, a time when mosques should host prayer and evening fast-breaking, RFA reported.

    The promotional video, put out by a local propaganda office, features a bare-armed Uyghur woman as a dancer from ‘Women’s Kingdom’, a fictional polity whose queen sought to marry the Chinese protagonist of the classic Ming Dynasty novel ‘Journey to the West’, RFA reported.

    She twirls in the otherwise empty Kuchar Grand Mosque.

    The video, which circulated on Douyin, the Chinese version of TikTok, emerged amid a tourism campaign to draw Han Chinese to the far-western region of Xinjiang, home to the mostly Muslim Uyghur and other Turkic people now that Covid-19 travel restrictions have been lifted.

    There were 35.2 million individual visits to Xinjiang between January and March this year, resulting in 2.5 billion yuan in tourism revenue, an increase of 36 per cent over the same period last year, according to state media.

    But Uyghurs say such videos are both offensive and part of a wider attempt to diminish or erase their religion and culture, RFA reported.

    The video was shared on Facebook by Uyghur activist and reeducation camp survivor Zumret Dawut. It has since been taken down from Douyin.

    “The message [of the video] to the Uyghurs is that we can suppress and even destroy you by assaulting and breaking your dignity through humiliation – we can do anything we want to do,” said Ilshat Hassan, Deputy Executive Chairman of the World Uyghur Congress, RFA reported.

    The transformation of the Uyghur region’s most prominent religious sites into tourist attractions, demolition of other mosques and shrines, criminalisation of public expressions of Islamic piety, and pervasive surveillance have left Uyghurs with nowhere to observe Ramadan but home, RFA reported.

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  • World Uyghur Congress nominated for Nobel Prize

    World Uyghur Congress nominated for Nobel Prize

    The awards ceremony takes place in December in Oslo…reports Asian Lite News

    Germany-based Uyghur rights group, World Uyghur Congress, has been nominated for the 2023 Nobel Peace Prize for its work toward peace, democracy and the plight of the Uyghur and other Turkic people who live under what the nomination letter described as a “repressive regime in China,” Voice of America (VOA) reported.

    Canadian lawmakers and a leader of the Young Liberals in Norway, the youth wing of Norway’s Venstre political party, nominated the organization. “The World Uyghur Congress has the main purpose of promoting democracy, human rights, and freedom for the Uyghur People and supporting the use of peaceful, non-violent, and democratic means to help the Uyghurs achieve self-determination,” the nomination letter read.

    Although the committee didn’t disclose the names of the Nobel Peace nominees because of the rules, Alexis Brunelle-Duceppe, one of two Canadian members of parliament who nominated the group, revealed the name and shared the letter with VOA.

    The awards ceremony takes place in December in Oslo.

    The nomination letter noted the World Uyghur Congress has drawn global attention to China’s treatment of Uyghurs with “the overwhelming campaign of physical, religious, linguistic, and cultural repression” by the Chinese government.

    “To achieve this, the World Uyghur Congress has a wide range of activities, including campaigning for the rights of people being forcefully disappeared, advocating for the release of political prisoners, protecting the rights of asylum seekers to prevent forcible repatriation to China, and advocating at the UN, EU, and national level, where the WUC has successfully contributed to numerous achievements, which led to the international community developing policies and actions to help secure the rights of the Uyghurs,” Brunelle-Duceppe said in the letter.

    Beijing has repeatedly denied mistreating Uyghurs, with China’s state news agency, Xinhua, describing the allegations as “lies” concocted by “anti-China forces in the West,” according to VOA.

    “Xinjiang-related issues are not about human rights, ethnicity or religion at all, but about combating violent terrorism and separatism,” stated Xinhua in a 2021 article, as it pointed out the region has experienced economic and social development.

    The Chinese embassy in Washington criticized the World Uyghur Congress’ nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize.

    “It is hoped that the prize will contribute to global peace and development, rather than falling into a political tool at the disposal of a few politicians,” Chinese embassy spokesperson Liu Pengyu told VOA in an email.

    “The so-called ‘World Uyghur Congress’ has close linkages with terrorist organizations. Nominating such an organization for the Nobel Peace Prize is highly detrimental to world peace and is a great irony of the Nobel Peace Prize,” the mail added, according to VOA

    Last August, the UN human rights office released a report on Xinjiang, which stated that China has committed “serious human rights violations” against the Uyghur. The report also stated that China has committed to “other predominantly Muslim communities” in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR).

    “The Chinese government has perpetrated the same lies for decades,” Zumretay Arkin, advocacy manager of the World Uyghur Congress, told VOA.

    “The fact that the WUC was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize is proof that the free and democratic world has recognized the World Uyghur Congress’ work as valuable and important. Instead of defaming such organizations, the Chinese government should listen to the democratic world,” VOA quoted Arkin saying.

    According to the group’s website, the World Uyghur Congress was founded in 2004, in Munich, Germany, after the East Turkistan National Congress and the World Uyghur Youth Congress merged into one organization. (ANI)

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  • ‘Uyghur woman in jail for sending kids to religious school’

    ‘Uyghur woman in jail for sending kids to religious school’

    Even after 26 years of the Ghulja massacre, the situation of Uyghurs has deteriorated to the extent that China is now openly executing Uyghurs…reports Asian Lite News

    For over two decades, Uyghur woman, Ayshemhan Abdulla, has been serving sentence in jail for sending her three teenage children to a local home-based religious school, Radio Free Asia (RFA) reported.

    Abdulla, now 62, thought she was doing what was best for her two daughters and one son by ensuring they received Islamic religious instruction in keeping with their Muslim Uyghur identity in China’s far-western Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. Uyghur Times recently reported that to completely eradicate Uyghurs, the Chinese authorities are now openly executing Uyghurs but the world is not taking action against China. The author warned that soon the world will face what Uyghurs have been going through.

    Abdullah, a resident of Ghulja county, or Yining in Chinese, was sentenced to 21 years in prison in 2017 for sending her children to a house religious school, said a security chief from her village in Qarayaghach township.

    “She is serving her prison term in Baykol Women’s Prison in Ghulja city. For each child she sent, she received seven years in prison,” said the man who declined to be named, RFA reported.

    According to the village security chief, the authorities also took Abdulla’s children to a camp and held them for more than a year, but later released them.

    But Abdulla is not the only one who got entangled in Chinese authorities’ dragnet in Xinjiang, where more than 11 million Turkic-speaking, mostly Muslim Uyghurs live, over 60 Uyghurs were arrested and sentenced to harsh prison sentences for sending their children to religious schools though they had done so more than a decade ago, according to the Xinjiang Police Files, a cache of millions of confidential documents hacked from Xinjiang police computers and released in May 2022. Though Abdulla was not on the list, the files indicate that the arrests of innocent people were not legal.

    An Uyghur former police officer, who declined to divulge his name, said Abdulla’s harsh sentence was likely not the decision of judicial authorities but made by the Chinese Communist Party’s political and legal committee.

    The former policeman, who now lives in Sweden, said he believes Beijing authorities set their own arrest numbers and told local authorities who should receive harsh punishments.

    Even after 26 years of the Ghulja massacre, the situation of Uyghurs has deteriorated to the extent that China is now openly executing Uyghurs, treating them inhumanely by caging them in camps, destroying Mosques, banning Ramadan, snatching away children from their parents, forcing them to rot in orphanages, and many more unspeakable tortures are happening, the author Gulnaz Uighur warned in his article. (ANI)

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