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Thailand decision to deport 109 Uighurs to China results in Consulate attacked in Turkey.

why nobody condemn chinese regime in hear. is assimilating uyghurs with worst methods since years
shame on thailand government . cowards
We have been assimilating this region since 2000 years ago! Remember this area where the religion was once 'buddhism' and the islamization began only from China's Yuan Daynasty whose broad culture widely called Mongolia Empire.
Tukey stay away,the race of Tujue is asian or mongolian,not arabic!So the name of Tukey is weird,you don't deserve that name.

Let them decide their own future and if Turkey accepts them let them move to Turkey. Sending them back to China is bad idea.
Some guys innocent among them cheated by others and almost all of them are from poor areas. Get into Tukey from east asian contries, then sent into ISIS or Syria to be trained, and later 'God konws'.
 
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Songkhla bombing leaves one dead | Bangkok Post: news
Southern blasts kill one, injure 13

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Villagers and officials inspect damage at a beef barbecue restaurant in Sungai Kolok district of Narathiwat on Friday night. (Photo by Waedao Harai)
One person was killed and a total of 13 injured in four separate bomb atacks on Friday evening in the restive southern provinces of Songkhla and Narathiwat.

In Songkhla, a motorcycle bomb exploded in Padang Besar subdistrict of Sadao district at 8.45pm Friday. A woman was killed and five others were injured.

The motorcycle was parked beside a Siam Commercial Bank branch near a police booth.

In Narathiwat, eight people were injured in an explosion at a karaoke shop, which followed two other incidents targeting restaurants. All of the incidents took place in Sungai Kolok district of the southernmost province.

The first two incidents involved homemade pipe bombs that the same pillion rider hurled into the restaurants at 6.50pm, witnesses said.

The targets were the Jenny restaurant on Luk Sua Anusorn 4 Road, and a Korean-style beef barbecue restaurant named Phat on Luk Sua Anusorn 5 Road, about 300 metres away from the first site.

Damage to the restaurants was minimal. No one was injured because the first restaurant was empty at the time while the other bomb hit the roof of the second restaurant.

While security officials were examining both locations, another bomb in a steel box went off by Prachawiwat 2 Road. Its impact shattered the front windowpanes of the Busaba Karaoke shop, injuring eight people and damaging a vehicle.

Two of the injured people were women identified as Kanyarat Wanthong, 27, and Anny Iamsri.
 
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Go bash their embassy and any one who looks East Asian. Its very fashionable in Turkey at the moment.

They attacked a Chinese-looking lady, again, in front of the Thai Embassy.

Here is the video. The danger is real. I am not sure what the people are telling, but they look darn scary like ISIS.


@somsak
 
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This started to become boring.

I don't know what's wrong with people lately but our right leaning politics started to argue with every other nation in the world. I mean they dislike Israel, they don't like anything European, they definitely don't like USA, now they don't like China and the nations that China can influence.

What's wrong with you people? We should not interfere internal affairs of other countries, just like we don't like international interference to our own internal problems. I can't even tell how hypocrite this is.

Let's leave the huge hypocricy for one second and talk about the fact that we are behaving like a bunch of cry baby barbarians. I mean what can we do against China? Do we have an action plan? Even US can't influence China, how can we influence them? We only beat people on the street, burn flags and attack consulates and do nothing more. Just like a bunch of losers.

Do you know how many Chinese workers working in Turkey?
Do you know how many Chinese companies operate in Turkey?
Do you know how our trade volume with China?
Do you know how many Chinese tourists come to visit Turkey?

If someone will influence somebody, it will be us who will be influenced not them.

Turks listen to my voice : China is a growing economic power. China is a huge regional power and is a candidate global power. For a more "well balanced" world, we need Chinese culture (and east asian on a more broad term) culture embedded into the global mainstream culture. China's rise would only benefit Turkey.
To be honest . Before this shit happened , Chinese people have a above average impression of Turks and Chinese never did bad thing to Turks.

Now thanks to those riots , we two begin to hate each other.

I guess so.
Real reason: I don't know.
Read what happened 4 months ago. Turkey one side, China the other side, want Thailand to send these Uighurs to them.
Tug-of-war between China, Turkey over suspected Uighurs in Thailand| Reuters
Poor thai.
You guys are really innocent. Next time just keep your boarder tight .
 
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@somsak , I read Thailand has temporarily closed down its embassy in Turkey for the fear of attacks and warned its citizens in the country. Any confirmation of this in the Thailand media?

And what is the whereabouts of the lady who was attacked by the Turkish nationalist and Islamist mobs? Has she returned home?
 
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@somsak , I read Thailand has temporarily closed down its embassy in Turkey for the fear of attacks and warned its citizens in the country. Any confirmation of this in the Thailand media?

And what is the whereabouts of the lady who was attacked by the Turkish nationalist and Islamist mobs? Has she returned home?
Thai news paper reports confirmed that Thai embassy is tempolary close. Thai news paper reports that "an Asian tourist woman was attacked because being misunderstood as a Chinese." The news does not say she is Thai too, but can imply she is neither Thai nor Chinese.
 
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Thai news paper reports confirmed that Thai embassy is tempolary close. Thai news paper reports that "an Asian tourist woman was attacked because being misunderstood as a Chinese." The news does not say she is Thai too, but can imply she is neither Thai nor Chinese.

I could not find much info about the victim's whereabouts, either. All I know is she was walking past the Thai Embassy in Ankara and was attacked by the mobs. It was the security in front of the embassy that took her to safety from the angry mobs. I am surprised that in such a modern area of Ankara (I first though the attack occurred in Istanbul) you would have those Taliban-like women and men that are able to attack consulate and civilians.

It is wise for Thai embassy to stay closed for a long time.
 
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Pity.. What Erdogan and his mullah's are turning the Turkish society in to.. The jewel of the Islamic world might end up like Afghanistan
 
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Pity.. What Erdogan and his mullah's are turning the Turkish society in to.. The jewel of the Islamic world might end up like Afghanistan

Why does Turkey think they are the 'Jewel' of the Islamic world? They are more like the terrorist hub and Western laptop of the Islamic world. If anyone is the jewel of the Islamic world, that would defiantly be Iran (Persia), not some honorary white Muslim terrorist state that is the obedient laptop of European powers.
 
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Turkish bias behind anti-China protests
By Zan Tao Source:Global Times Published: 2015-7-13 23:53:01

A series of protests against China in Turkey have captured the headlines of international media. They were partly triggered by false information that China has banned fasting for Ramadan in the Muslim-majority Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. Late last week, the Thai consulate in Istanbul was vandalized by pro-Uyghur protesters as the Thai government announced it would repatriate over 100 illegal Uyghur migrants who wanted to steal their way to Turkey. Amid a spike of condemnations by some so-called human rights organizations, Turkey's reaction to the repatriation could be among the most violent.

Although far from Xinjiang, the Turks are related to the Uyghurs in many ways. Many Turks believe that they share strong cultural and religious connections with the Uyghurs, who also speak a Turkic language. For the last century, Turkey has been the major destination of Uyghur immigrants, whose descendents have constituted a massive community with a population of more than 100,000 according to the Turkish Interior Ministry.

The deep roots of pan-Turkism create the major drive for some Turks to pay such keen attention to the Uyghurs. After the fall of the Ottoman Empire, Turkey, as a successor, has gradually become regarded as a home to various Turkic-speaking peoples across the world. This trend has greatly enhanced Turkish concerns about their "siblings" around the globe.

There was no chance in modern history for the Turkic-speaking peoples to found a pan-Turkic empire, but after imposing influence for decades, pan-Turkism has taken a deep root among the Turkish people culturally and psychologically.

Therefore, what is happening to the Uyghurs in Xinjiang is also treated as the Turks' business. In this way, the cultural concerns of pan-Turkism have been translated into political ones. After Turgut Özal came to power in Turkey in late 1980s, Turkey's politics started to transform from Kemalism, featuring meritocracy and statism, to post-Kemalism, including liberalism, pluralism and nationalism, by moderate Islamic political parties. This has given rise to both pan-Turkism and pan-Islamism.

Aside from pan-Turkism, the expansion of pan-Islamism has also contributed. The natural "brotherhood" among all Muslims has been developed into an ideology that is used by many pro-Muslim political entities to strengthen links among Muslim communities.

The AK Party formerly led by Recep Tayyp Erdogan in Turkey, which came to power in 2002 and had won three successive parliamentary elections since then, is deemed as a pro-Islamist party. The AK Party and its former charismatic leader Erdogan have frequently voiced their high-profile concerns over affairs in various Muslim areas of the globe.

Another major factor is that Turkey to some extent shares the same value system with the West. Turkey has been tirelessly embracing the Western Hemisphere in its process of modernization. However, Turkey faces a divided future.

On the one hand, it claims itself as a Western country by trying every means to find a way into the NATO and EU. On the other hand, it is not treated as "one of them" by European countries. For example, its application to accede to the EU has been in bad shape for decades. However, although not fully accepted as a Western country, Turkey is eager to share the same modern values and ideologies with the West in terms of freedom of religion, minority issues and human rights.

Pan-Turkism, pan-Islamism and West-oriented modernity are the three essential factors that have bred the recent protests in Turkey against China. Besides, the populist Erdogan, who has held power for more than a decade, has added fuel to the rise of nationalism.

The power of ideologies, reflected in public opinion, can easily run out of control. Once a prejudice is established among the public, governments will find it hard to be rectified. Likely, Uyghur issues may grow to be a big barrier in Sino-Turkish relations unless both sides take further measures as soon as possible.

The crux of Turkish bias is a lack of real knowledge about the Uyghurs in Xinjiang. People-to-people communication, a sphere to which we have not paid enough attention so far, must be given its due focus. A regular and constant communication mechanism on common concerns must be established between the two sides as an indispensable supplement to the official bilateral relationship between Turkey and China.
 
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Why does Turkey think they are the 'Jewel' of the Islamic world? They are more like the terrorist hub and Western laptop of the Islamic world. If anyone is the jewel of the Islamic world, that would defiantly be Iran (Persia), not some honorary white Muslim terrorist state that is the obedient laptop of European powers.

Because the modern Turkish nation that Atatuk founded and his successes governed is indeed the epitome of a progressive nation should be and a very rare Muslim nation.. Ideally it should have been emulated throughout the middle East..

The issue with Erdogan and his religious extremists are trying hard to roll back all that for there own political motives.. They seem to have been emboldened with the chaos they created in Syria.. But the ISIS will be the downfall of Erdogan himself

As for Iran.. Iranian people some of the most edcated and progressive and their Mullah led administration trying hard to keep its population in religious dark ages are two very different things
 
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