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ALL Xinjiang related issues e.g. uyghur people, development, videos etc, In here please.

An Independent East Turkestan will be bad for Pakistan

  • Yes

    Votes: 64 53.8%
  • No

    Votes: 55 46.2%

  • Total voters
    119
The Uyghur Genocide and China
March 24, 2021
Nathan Wunderli ‘22
Sports Editor

As part of the second week of HRP’s Human Rights Month, UVA Law was pleased to hear from two speakers on the current Chinese attempt at genocide of the Uyghur people. Zubayra Shamseden is a human rights activist, organizer, and Chinese Language Outreach Coordinator at the Uyghur Human Rights Project based in Washington D.C. Dolkun Isa is a widely-recognized political activist and current president of the World Uyghur Congress and recipient of the National Endowment for Democracy's Democracy Award.
Pictured: Uyghur people protest outside the UN headquarters in Genevea in November 2018. Photo courtesy of: Salvatore Di Nolfi/EP

Pictured: Uyghur people protest outside the UN headquarters in Genevea in November 2018. Photo courtesy of: Salvatore Di Nolfi/EP
Who are the Uyghurs?
By the estimates of the Chinese government, the Uyghurs are 11 million strong and live in East Turkestan, otherwise known as the Xinjiang province of China. Uyghurs themselves estimate they number around 20 million people. Dating back to the 8th century, the Uyghurs have been predominantly Muslim, with traces of Christianity and Buddhism as well. They have their own language and customs, completely different than those in China. According to Ms. Shamseden, they are rather moderate Muslims.

What is Going On?
Much like Tibet, on paper, the East Turkestan region is independent from China. The reality is far from that. The Chinese government has employed several strategies, all with the goal of wiping out the Uyghur people, culture, and language and assimilating them into China. While China says they are employing bilingual education programs, in reality the education they use contains very little to none of the Uyghur people’s language. Additionally, while East Turkestan used to be over 90 percent Uyghur, the Chinese government has intentionally implanted Chinese people into the region so that it is now 50 percent Uyghur and 50 percent Chinese. While these attempts at getting rid of the Uyghur people are bad, it is no where close to the worst thing the Chinese government is doing.
An estimated 2-3 million Uyghur people are currently being detained in political “re-education camps.” These camps are numerous and located throughout China. As if there was any doubt of what goes on at these horrific sites, a single site was reported to have purchased 2,768 police batons and 550 electric cattle prods, among other things used for manipulation and torture. The people are typically kept alive, but are brutally dehumanized and tortured. The prisoners are taken from all walks of Uyghur life, including thousands of intellectuals that are currently detained or missing.
Uyghurs get detained and sent to camps for what the Chinese government dubs as examples of “extremism.” For instance, watching a Western movie could get you detained. Communicating with people outside of China or traveling outside of China can get you detained. Practicing the Islamic faith, even something so simple as owning a prayer mat, can get you detained. Refusing to allow government officials to sleep in your bed with you, eat your food, or live in your house? Detained. Reading up on Uyghur culture and history? Good luck at camp. Not only can all these things that we take for granted get you sent away to a “re-education” camp and tortured, but the Chinese government makes it hard to get away with any of these things through extensive surveillance. The minute you leave your house, you are being watched or followed, either by a person or by technology.

What Can We Do to Help?
The Uyghur people are being crushed and abused by China, and it won’t be too long before China’s forceful assimilation strategies wipe out the Uyghur people for good. Fortunately, there are some measures we can take to help, even as American law students. You can 1) Contact your senators and urge them to co-sponsor the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, 2) Sign various petitions (contact UVA Law’s HRP Rep. Alex Karahalios (ank3jf@virginia.edu) for more details), including one to refuse to hold the Olympic Games in China in 2022 unless the camps are closed, or you can 3) donate to the UHRP. Every time there is a human rights crisis, the mantra is “never again.” Unfortunately, never again is happening right now to the Uyghur people, and it is now or never to respond.
---
nw7cz@virginia.edu
View attachment 728545The protesters waved sky blue flags of Uyghur separatists' self-proclaimed state of East Turkestan as they gathered in Istanbul's historic old town AFP/Adem ALTAN
Just a couple pictures of prisoner but you can claimed as genocide?
 
The West seems to care much about Asians outside their border.

While Asians inside their border are abused and punched daily.


It's funny they say they care much about Uighurs...

By boycotting their product, destroying their economy, and starving them to death.


I don't know what to say.
 
You are absolutely biased. There is no facts on your statement.


We all know the BS of Iraq WMD after all..


The last straw will be you insulting all Pakistanis as terrorist for agreeing and claim CNN has credibility since they report Pakistan ISI shelter Osama.

CNN report of Uyghur in Xinjiang is as fake as their coverage of Pakistanis ISI shelter Osama bin Laden.

CNN also reported thaf in every 8 second a female is attacked in China.

We all nearly died laughing but the dudes in USA and elsewhere believe it.

:sarcastic: :sarcastic: :sarcastic:
 
Uyghur Activists in Exile Emboldened by Beijing’s Attacks
By Asim Kashgarian
March 26, 2021 05:40 PM

A protester from the Uyghur community living in Turkey stands with flags in the Beyazit mosque during a protest against the…
A protester from the Uyghur community living in Turkey stands with flags in the Beyazit mosque during a protest against the visit of China's Foreign Minister to Turkey, in Istanbul on March 25, 2021.

WASHINGTON - Uyghur and Kazakh women activists who have been at the forefront of international criticism of Beijing’s repressive policies in Xinjiang say they are not backing down after Chinese officials publicly smeared their character to try to discredit them.
Several women have become outspoken activists in exile, telling international media that they endured rape, torture, forced sterilization and indoctrination by Chinese authorities in internment camps.
In recent weeks, China’s officials have accused them of having affairs and sexually transmitted diseases and committing loan fraud as evidence of bad character. The effort to disprove the women’s accounts comes as Beijing faces growing international pressure over its four-year crackdown against the Turkic ethnic groups.
Uyghurs women take part in a protest during the visit of Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Berlin, Germany, Tuesday, Sept. 1,…
Uyghurs women take part in a protest during the visit of Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Berlin, Germany, Sept. 1, 2020.
But some of the women say the criticism has only emboldened them to speak out more about these abuses.
“It is unbelievable that in order to invalidate my accounts of rape, torture and forced sterilization, Chinese officials said I was infertile,” said Tursunay Ziyawudun, 42, a Uyghur camp survivor.
Ziyawudun was allowed by the Chinese government to travel for only one month to Kazakhstan to stay with her husband in September 2019 after she had been released from an internment camp in Xinjiang. She moved to the U.S. state of Virginia a year later. She told VOA that her uterus had to be removed after arriving in the U.S. because of sustained injury from abuses in Xinjiang.
“On four different occasions, I was taken to an interrogation room, where I was beaten. My private part was electrocuted unbearably by an electric baton and I was gang-raped,” Ziyawudun told VOA, adding that some of her fellow female detainees never came back to the cell after their visit to the interrogation room, and those who did return were told to keep quiet.
Beijing has publicly called the Uyghur women activists “liars” and “actors” fabricating “fake news” on Xinjiang.
Xu Guixiang, the deputy propaganda head of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region for China's Communist Party, speaks during a…
FILE - Xu Guixiang, the deputy propaganda head of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region for China's Communist Party, speaks during a press conference at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing, March 18, 2021.
On February 18, Xu Guixiang, the deputy director-general of the Publicity Department of Xinjiang, called Ziyawudun’s accusations “sheer nonsense.” At a press conference in Beijing, Xu portrayed Ziyawudun as a tool of China’s enemies and made allegations concerning her marriage history and supposed divorce over infertility.
“After leaving the country, in order to gain the refugee status, she was willing to be the 'actress' and manipulated by anti-China forces,” Xu told reporters.
Some China observers and rights activists say they are not surprised that China’s Communist Party (CCP) is attacking the character of its critics. They say the CCP continues to prevent independent, outside groups from investigating claims of abuse made by Uyghurs and others.
“These accusations often are accompanied by other ad hominem attacks. All of these are efforts to diminish criticisms of the CCP overseas,” said Anastasia Lin, a senior fellow at the Canada-based Raoul Wallenberg Human Rights Center.
Elijan Anayat, spokesperson of the Information Office of the People's Government of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, answers a…
FILE - Elijan Anayat, spokesperson of the Information Office of the People's Government of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, answers a question at a press conference in Beijing on Jan. 11, 2021.
At the same press conference in Beijing last month, Elijan Anayat, a spokesperson for the Xinjiang regional government, attacked Gulbahar Haitwaji, another Uyghur activist who has accused China of torture and inhumane cruelty against Uyghurs stemming from her two years in the country’s re-education camps.
“When she lived in China, she had affairs with other people and was exposed by her neighbor.” Anayat told the news conference. He further questioned Haitwaji’s integrity and accused her of membership in a “terrorist organization” — the World Uyghur Congress, an exile group based in London whose leaders have testified before the U.S. Congress and the United Nations.
Haitwaji, 55, a mother of two, currently lives in France and recounted details of her detention in internment camps from 2017 to 2019 in a book, "Survivor of the Chinese Gulag.” Haitwaji said she was chained to her bed for 20 days and witnessed similar inhumane treatment against other Uyghur women by camp officials in Karamay, a northern city in Xinjiang.
“I told truthfully what I have witnessed in the camps in the book, and now unable to invalidate my accounts, they [Chinese officials] come after me with baseless character attacks,” Haitwaji said last month in the interview with Radio Free Asia while strongly rejecting Anayat’s attacks.
Zumret Dawut, 38, is yet another Uyghur woman smeared by Beijing. Chinese officials have characterized her as someone with “inferior character,” while denying that she was sterilized or was ever held in internment camps.
“Everyone knows about her,” Xu said last month in Beijing, “she’s lazy and likes comfort. Her private life is chaotic, and her neighbors say that she committed adultery while in China.”
Members of Women Muslim Uighur minority chant slogans and wave flags of east Turkestan as they demonstrate to ask for news of…
FILE - Female members of the Muslim Uyghur minority chant slogans and wave flags of East Turkestan as they demonstrate to ask for news of their relatives near China's consulate in Istanbul on March 8, 2021.
Dawut told VOA that Xu’s attacks were baseless and proved her activism has helped further expose China’s stringent policies in Xinjiang. She said she was kept in an internment camp in Urumqi in 2018 for more than two months until her Pakistani husband secured her release. Camp authorities, according to her, forced her and 200 other Uyghur women to undergo sterilization surgery in late 2018 at Urumqi county hospital.
“I had spoken facts about rights abuses against me and my people in East Turkestan. That is why China is trying to silence me with character attacks,” Dawut said, adding that she would continue telling about Beijing’s abuses in East Turkestan, a preferred term used by Uyghurs for Xinjiang.
Tim Grose, an assistant professor of China studies at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in Terre Haute, Indiana, said it was unlikely that the tactic by Chinese diplomats and state-media against these women can distract international attention from reports of human rights violations in Xinjiang.
“This tactic tries to deflect attention from the serious allegations and seeks to sow doubt,” Grose told VOA, adding that the CCP has used a similar strategy to also go after researchers and media outlets considered anti-China.
Zubayra Shamseden, Chinese Outreach Coordinator at the Washington-based Uyghur Human Rights Project, said the accusations show the women have been influential in providing information on Xinjiang despite China’s effort to isolate it.
Going after activists’ private lives and publicly shaming them has become a norm in crackdowns to silence Uyghur witnesses, Shamseden told VOA.
“Those women witnesses' testimonies truly hit the hot spot of what China is trying to hide from the world: slow but firm genocide of Uyghurs,” she told VOA.
RELATED STORIES
 
Uyghur Activists in Exile Emboldened by Beijing’s Attacks
By Asim Kashgarian
March 26, 2021 05:40 PM

A protester from the Uyghur community living in Turkey stands with flags in the Beyazit mosque during a protest against the…
A protester from the Uyghur community living in Turkey stands with flags in the Beyazit mosque during a protest against the visit of China's Foreign Minister to Turkey, in Istanbul on March 25, 2021.

WASHINGTON - Uyghur and Kazakh women activists who have been at the forefront of international criticism of Beijing’s repressive policies in Xinjiang say they are not backing down after Chinese officials publicly smeared their character to try to discredit them.
Several women have become outspoken activists in exile, telling international media that they endured rape, torture, forced sterilization and indoctrination by Chinese authorities in internment camps.
In recent weeks, China’s officials have accused them of having affairs and sexually transmitted diseases and committing loan fraud as evidence of bad character. The effort to disprove the women’s accounts comes as Beijing faces growing international pressure over its four-year crackdown against the Turkic ethnic groups.
Uyghurs women take part in a protest during the visit of Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Berlin, Germany, Tuesday, Sept. 1,…
Uyghurs women take part in a protest during the visit of Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Berlin, Germany, Sept. 1, 2020.
But some of the women say the criticism has only emboldened them to speak out more about these abuses.
“It is unbelievable that in order to invalidate my accounts of rape, torture and forced sterilization, Chinese officials said I was infertile,” said Tursunay Ziyawudun, 42, a Uyghur camp survivor.
Ziyawudun was allowed by the Chinese government to travel for only one month to Kazakhstan to stay with her husband in September 2019 after she had been released from an internment camp in Xinjiang. She moved to the U.S. state of Virginia a year later. She told VOA that her uterus had to be removed after arriving in the U.S. because of sustained injury from abuses in Xinjiang.
“On four different occasions, I was taken to an interrogation room, where I was beaten. My private part was electrocuted unbearably by an electric baton and I was gang-raped,” Ziyawudun told VOA, adding that some of her fellow female detainees never came back to the cell after their visit to the interrogation room, and those who did return were told to keep quiet.
Beijing has publicly called the Uyghur women activists “liars” and “actors” fabricating “fake news” on Xinjiang.
Xu Guixiang, the deputy propaganda head of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region for China's Communist Party, speaks during a…'s Communist Party, speaks during a…
FILE - Xu Guixiang, the deputy propaganda head of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region for China's Communist Party, speaks during a press conference at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing, March 18, 2021.
On February 18, Xu Guixiang, the deputy director-general of the Publicity Department of Xinjiang, called Ziyawudun’s accusations “sheer nonsense.” At a press conference in Beijing, Xu portrayed Ziyawudun as a tool of China’s enemies and made allegations concerning her marriage history and supposed divorce over infertility.
“After leaving the country, in order to gain the refugee status, she was willing to be the 'actress' and manipulated by anti-China forces,” Xu told reporters.
Some China observers and rights activists say they are not surprised that China’s Communist Party (CCP) is attacking the character of its critics. They say the CCP continues to prevent independent, outside groups from investigating claims of abuse made by Uyghurs and others.
“These accusations often are accompanied by other ad hominem attacks. All of these are efforts to diminish criticisms of the CCP overseas,” said Anastasia Lin, a senior fellow at the Canada-based Raoul Wallenberg Human Rights Center.
Elijan Anayat, spokesperson of the Information Office of the People's Government of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, answers a…'s Government of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, answers a…
FILE - Elijan Anayat, spokesperson of the Information Office of the People's Government of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, answers a question at a press conference in Beijing on Jan. 11, 2021.
At the same press conference in Beijing last month, Elijan Anayat, a spokesperson for the Xinjiang regional government, attacked Gulbahar Haitwaji, another Uyghur activist who has accused China of torture and inhumane cruelty against Uyghurs stemming from her two years in the country’s re-education camps.
“When she lived in China, she had affairs with other people and was exposed by her neighbor.” Anayat told the news conference. He further questioned Haitwaji’s integrity and accused her of membership in a “terrorist organization” — the World Uyghur Congress, an exile group based in London whose leaders have testified before the U.S. Congress and the United Nations.
Haitwaji, 55, a mother of two, currently lives in France and recounted details of her detention in internment camps from 2017 to 2019 in a book, "Survivor of the Chinese Gulag.” Haitwaji said she was chained to her bed for 20 days and witnessed similar inhumane treatment against other Uyghur women by camp officials in Karamay, a northern city in Xinjiang.
“I told truthfully what I have witnessed in the camps in the book, and now unable to invalidate my accounts, they [Chinese officials] come after me with baseless character attacks,” Haitwaji said last month in the interview with Radio Free Asia while strongly rejecting Anayat’s attacks.
Zumret Dawut, 38, is yet another Uyghur woman smeared by Beijing. Chinese officials have characterized her as someone with “inferior character,” while denying that she was sterilized or was ever held in internment camps.
“Everyone knows about her,” Xu said last month in Beijing, “she’s lazy and likes comfort. Her private life is chaotic, and her neighbors say that she committed adultery while in China.”
Members of Women Muslim Uighur minority chant slogans and wave flags of east Turkestan as they demonstrate to ask for news of…
FILE - Female members of the Muslim Uyghur minority chant slogans and wave flags of East Turkestan as they demonstrate to ask for news of their relatives near China's consulate in Istanbul on March 8, 2021.
Dawut told VOA that Xu’s attacks were baseless and proved her activism has helped further expose China’s stringent policies in Xinjiang. She said she was kept in an internment camp in Urumqi in 2018 for more than two months until her Pakistani husband secured her release. Camp authorities, according to her, forced her and 200 other Uyghur women to undergo sterilization surgery in late 2018 at Urumqi county hospital.
“I had spoken facts about rights abuses against me and my people in East Turkestan. That is why China is trying to silence me with character attacks,” Dawut said, adding that she would continue telling about Beijing’s abuses in East Turkestan, a preferred term used by Uyghurs for Xinjiang.
Tim Grose, an assistant professor of China studies at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in Terre Haute, Indiana, said it was unlikely that the tactic by Chinese diplomats and state-media against these women can distract international attention from reports of human rights violations in Xinjiang.
“This tactic tries to deflect attention from the serious allegations and seeks to sow doubt,” Grose told VOA, adding that the CCP has used a similar strategy to also go after researchers and media outlets considered anti-China.
Zubayra Shamseden, Chinese Outreach Coordinator at the Washington-based Uyghur Human Rights Project, said the accusations show the women have been influential in providing information on Xinjiang despite China’s effort to isolate it.
Going after activists’ private lives and publicly shaming them has become a norm in crackdowns to silence Uyghur witnesses, Shamseden told VOA.
“Those women witnesses' testimonies truly hit the hot spot of what China is trying to hide from the world: slow but firm genocide of Uyghurs,” she told VOA.
RELATED STORIES

@Itachi
 
Uyghur Activists in Exile Emboldened by Beijing’s Attacks
By Asim Kashgarian
March 26, 2021 05:40 PM

A protester from the Uyghur community living in Turkey stands with flags in the Beyazit mosque during a protest against the…
A protester from the Uyghur community living in Turkey stands with flags in the Beyazit mosque during a protest against the visit of China's Foreign Minister to Turkey, in Istanbul on March 25, 2021.

WASHINGTON - Uyghur and Kazakh women activists who have been at the forefront of international criticism of Beijing’s repressive policies in Xinjiang say they are not backing down after Chinese officials publicly smeared their character to try to discredit them.
Several women have become outspoken activists in exile, telling international media that they endured rape, torture, forced sterilization and indoctrination by Chinese authorities in internment camps.
In recent weeks, China’s officials have accused them of having affairs and sexually transmitted diseases and committing loan fraud as evidence of bad character. The effort to disprove the women’s accounts comes as Beijing faces growing international pressure over its four-year crackdown against the Turkic ethnic groups.
Uyghurs women take part in a protest during the visit of Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Berlin, Germany, Tuesday, Sept. 1,…
Uyghurs women take part in a protest during the visit of Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Berlin, Germany, Sept. 1, 2020.
But some of the women say the criticism has only emboldened them to speak out more about these abuses.
“It is unbelievable that in order to invalidate my accounts of rape, torture and forced sterilization, Chinese officials said I was infertile,” said Tursunay Ziyawudun, 42, a Uyghur camp survivor.
Ziyawudun was allowed by the Chinese government to travel for only one month to Kazakhstan to stay with her husband in September 2019 after she had been released from an internment camp in Xinjiang. She moved to the U.S. state of Virginia a year later. She told VOA that her uterus had to be removed after arriving in the U.S. because of sustained injury from abuses in Xinjiang.
“On four different occasions, I was taken to an interrogation room, where I was beaten. My private part was electrocuted unbearably by an electric baton and I was gang-raped,” Ziyawudun told VOA, adding that some of her fellow female detainees never came back to the cell after their visit to the interrogation room, and those who did return were told to keep quiet.
Beijing has publicly called the Uyghur women activists “liars” and “actors” fabricating “fake news” on Xinjiang.
Xu Guixiang, the deputy propaganda head of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region for China's Communist Party, speaks during a…'s Communist Party, speaks during a…
FILE - Xu Guixiang, the deputy propaganda head of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region for China's Communist Party, speaks during a press conference at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing, March 18, 2021.
On February 18, Xu Guixiang, the deputy director-general of the Publicity Department of Xinjiang, called Ziyawudun’s accusations “sheer nonsense.” At a press conference in Beijing, Xu portrayed Ziyawudun as a tool of China’s enemies and made allegations concerning her marriage history and supposed divorce over infertility.
“After leaving the country, in order to gain the refugee status, she was willing to be the 'actress' and manipulated by anti-China forces,” Xu told reporters.
Some China observers and rights activists say they are not surprised that China’s Communist Party (CCP) is attacking the character of its critics. They say the CCP continues to prevent independent, outside groups from investigating claims of abuse made by Uyghurs and others.
“These accusations often are accompanied by other ad hominem attacks. All of these are efforts to diminish criticisms of the CCP overseas,” said Anastasia Lin, a senior fellow at the Canada-based Raoul Wallenberg Human Rights Center.
Elijan Anayat, spokesperson of the Information Office of the People's Government of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, answers a…'s Government of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, answers a…
FILE - Elijan Anayat, spokesperson of the Information Office of the People's Government of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, answers a question at a press conference in Beijing on Jan. 11, 2021.
At the same press conference in Beijing last month, Elijan Anayat, a spokesperson for the Xinjiang regional government, attacked Gulbahar Haitwaji, another Uyghur activist who has accused China of torture and inhumane cruelty against Uyghurs stemming from her two years in the country’s re-education camps.
“When she lived in China, she had affairs with other people and was exposed by her neighbor.” Anayat told the news conference. He further questioned Haitwaji’s integrity and accused her of membership in a “terrorist organization” — the World Uyghur Congress, an exile group based in London whose leaders have testified before the U.S. Congress and the United Nations.
Haitwaji, 55, a mother of two, currently lives in France and recounted details of her detention in internment camps from 2017 to 2019 in a book, "Survivor of the Chinese Gulag.” Haitwaji said she was chained to her bed for 20 days and witnessed similar inhumane treatment against other Uyghur women by camp officials in Karamay, a northern city in Xinjiang.
“I told truthfully what I have witnessed in the camps in the book, and now unable to invalidate my accounts, they [Chinese officials] come after me with baseless character attacks,” Haitwaji said last month in the interview with Radio Free Asia while strongly rejecting Anayat’s attacks.
Zumret Dawut, 38, is yet another Uyghur woman smeared by Beijing. Chinese officials have characterized her as someone with “inferior character,” while denying that she was sterilized or was ever held in internment camps.
“Everyone knows about her,” Xu said last month in Beijing, “she’s lazy and likes comfort. Her private life is chaotic, and her neighbors say that she committed adultery while in China.”
Members of Women Muslim Uighur minority chant slogans and wave flags of east Turkestan as they demonstrate to ask for news of…
FILE - Female members of the Muslim Uyghur minority chant slogans and wave flags of East Turkestan as they demonstrate to ask for news of their relatives near China's consulate in Istanbul on March 8, 2021.
Dawut told VOA that Xu’s attacks were baseless and proved her activism has helped further expose China’s stringent policies in Xinjiang. She said she was kept in an internment camp in Urumqi in 2018 for more than two months until her Pakistani husband secured her release. Camp authorities, according to her, forced her and 200 other Uyghur women to undergo sterilization surgery in late 2018 at Urumqi county hospital.
“I had spoken facts about rights abuses against me and my people in East Turkestan. That is why China is trying to silence me with character attacks,” Dawut said, adding that she would continue telling about Beijing’s abuses in East Turkestan, a preferred term used by Uyghurs for Xinjiang.
Tim Grose, an assistant professor of China studies at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in Terre Haute, Indiana, said it was unlikely that the tactic by Chinese diplomats and state-media against these women can distract international attention from reports of human rights violations in Xinjiang.
“This tactic tries to deflect attention from the serious allegations and seeks to sow doubt,” Grose told VOA, adding that the CCP has used a similar strategy to also go after researchers and media outlets considered anti-China.
Zubayra Shamseden, Chinese Outreach Coordinator at the Washington-based Uyghur Human Rights Project, said the accusations show the women have been influential in providing information on Xinjiang despite China’s effort to isolate it.
Going after activists’ private lives and publicly shaming them has become a norm in crackdowns to silence Uyghur witnesses, Shamseden told VOA.
“Those women witnesses' testimonies truly hit the hot spot of what China is trying to hide from the world: slow but firm genocide of Uyghurs,” she told VOA.
RELATED STORIES

Not activists. Separatists.

 
There is nothing more hillarious than a US regime propaganda mouthpiece agent picking up a tourist visa for China, flying on Chinese airlines to bustling Chinese cities and start talking to the people about some "secret" American genocide conspiracy that supposed to go e in their backyard in the middle of a tourist site because of some retarded circlejerk of of US government paid and controlled fake activists and propaganda mouthpieces, while the paid shills here try hard to keep a straight face spamming the same recycled script for these lazy attrocity propaganda flick deflecting Americas genocidal and human rights abuse history on foreign countries like China every day on a defense forum.
 
Thank you. I will forward this to a wide emailing list that i run, which includes the addresses of several major international news organisations (CNN included), political parties and intelligence services, with a request for honest reporting.
Why don't you CCP bots share neutral sources rather than your stupid commie propaganda.
Honest testimony can not be dismissed.
 
fanboys have ben triggered

if you dont like it dont go crying to mods when you get owned
 

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