What's new

A Uyghur family fled and Beijing followed, pushing for prison and extradition in Turkey and Morocco

except that balochistan wasnt occupied by force. the nawabs acceded their land. there was no surrender or invasion.


thank you for posting the last pic. it strengthens my point that the commies took over it by force. it had no allegiance to the commies whatsoever.
The place in Xinjiang was originally a place where various ethnic groups have killed each other for thousands of years. The real appearance of the Uyghurs today is similar to the Kyrgyz. They originally lived in Mongolia. After being defeated by the Kyrgyz, they fled to Xinjiang. They raped and killed the local people. Tocharians, so now they look like Indo-Europeans.
 
.
thank you for posting the last pic. it strengthens my point that the commies took over it by force. it had no allegiance to the commies whatsoever.
Communists took China by force, so did KMT, Qing dynasty, Ming dynasty,...., so what's your point?
 
.
except that balochistan wasnt occupied by force. the nawabs acceded their land. there was no surrender or invasion.

Neither was Xinjiang. If anyone who invaded it, it was the Uyghurs, but Chinese have given them all the freedom they can give. So it's more than fair.

Pan-Islamists need to be eliminated.
 
.
They raped and killed the local people. Tocharians, so now they look like Indo-Europeans.
They converted to the Tocharian religion. This is Chinese rape, hate, and racism of the Uighurs.
'Since 2014,[34][35] the Chinese government has subjected Uyghurs living in Xinjiang to widespread human rights abuses, including forced sterilization[36][37][38] and forced labor,[39][40][41][42][43] in what has been described as genocide. Scholars estimate that at least one million Uyghurs have been arbitrarily detained in the Xinjiang internment camps since 2017;[44][45][46][47][48] Chinese government officials claim that these camps, created under CCP general secretary Xi Jinping's administration, serve the goals of ensuring adherence to Chinese Communist Party (CCP) ideology, preventing separatism, fighting terrorism, and providing vocational training to Uyghurs.[42][44][49][50][51] Various scholars, human rights organizations and governments consider abuses perpetrated against the Uyghurs to amount to crimes against humanity, or even genocide.'
 
.
They converted to the Tocharian religion. This is Chinese rape, hate, and racism of the Uighurs.
'Since 2014,[34][35] the Chinese government has subjected Uyghurs living in Xinjiang to widespread human rights abuses, including forced sterilization[36][37][38] and forced labor,[39][40][41][42][43] in what has been described as genocide. Scholars estimate that at least one million Uyghurs have been arbitrarily detained in the Xinjiang internment camps since 2017;[44][45][46][47][48] Chinese government officials claim that these camps, created under CCP general secretary Xi Jinping's administration, serve the goals of ensuring adherence to Chinese Communist Party (CCP) ideology, preventing separatism, fighting terrorism, and providing vocational training to Uyghurs.[42][44][49][50][51] Various scholars, human rights organizations and governments consider abuses perpetrated against the Uyghurs to amount to crimes against humanity, or even genocide.'
Yeah, from the BS mouths that include street shitter Indians.
 
. . .
I mean if this month inflation is 50%, and next month is also 50%, does it mean if the original price of good is 1000, since the inflation is 50% for this month, so the price will be 1500, and since the next month inflation is also 50%, so it becomes 2250?
Yes. If the statistics says month-to-month inflation rate is 50%, then it is 2250. But if the inflation is 50% per year, then 1000 this month will be about 1040 next month and a little over 1080 month after. 50% month-to-month is generally called hyperinflation and it generally indicates complete collapse of the monetary system. 50% per year is high inflation but not a collapse of the money. Recent examples of hyperinflation are Zimbabwe and Venezuela.
 
. .
He didn't reply. I take it he would not like it if Canada does to him what China does to Uighurs.

his own terror feudal owner xi does to him what china does to uighurs

hwo do you think xi able to achieve this without the people having a slave mentality and getting enough practice?



they are also self committing genocide due to bad social/political/economic situation


i literally can't think of any other people other than north koreans/chinese who would allow those massive covid concentration camps to happen to them
 
. .
Zeynure, 29, a Uyghur mother of three exiled in Istanbul, spoke to The China Project in June about the challenges of building a stable life after fleeing Xinjiang to escape genocide, as Beijing keeps up pressure to silence her husband.

Upon arrival in Turkey in 2013, the young couple were given a two-year, renewable humanitarian visa. Zeynure’s husband, Idris Hasan, set up a small graphic design firm called Shabnam — Uyghur for “Hope” — and began to publish, with friends, a newsletter of the same name filled with useful information for their community of exiles.

Turkey is home to more than 50,000 Uyghur refugees who have made the country their home since political upheavals began in China in the early 1950s.The latest wave arrived between 2015 and 2017, following an official crackdown on Uyghur culture in Xinjiang, an area in northwest China roughly the size of Alaska.

In 2014, when Idris applied for Turkish permanent residence for his family, local police detained him, pressured, Zeynure said, by China, where authorities claimed he was a national security threat. After two weeks, Idris was released, but for the next seven years, he was detained repeatedly without explanation, often for months at a time.

Zeynure’s two-bedroom apartment in suburban Istanbul is filled with her children’s toys. As she sifts through a mountain of paperwork connected with their father’s case, the three kids run in and out, jumping on a small trampoline and scribbling new vocabulary words in three languages on a large whiteboard.

Their mother is keen that they keep up their Uyghur, her tongue, even as she insists they not fall behind in Turkish and the English that will gain importance as they move through the world.

In 2016, during one of Idris’s periods free from detention, Zeynure’s parents came to Istanbul to visit their growing family for two weeks. After they went back to China, she called them and an uncle answered the phone. He told Zeynure that he was looking after the family sheep while her parents were away “studying,” using code for their having been sent to one of the hundreds of reeducation camps China established to stamp out Uyghur culture. Since then, Zeynure has had no news of her parents.

“I don’t know whether they are alive or dead,” she said.

Zeynure puts on a brave face, evenly recounting her parents’ disappearance, Idris’s multiple arrests, and the long stretches of not knowing where he was and what might be happening to him at a series of detention centers around Turkey: first in Istanbul, then in Kayseri, next in Erzurum, and finally back in Istanbul’s Kumkapi quarter.

His first arrest happened in 2014, while getting a health check as a part of his application for Turkish permanent residence for the family. Zeynure stopped nearby to feed their first child, Abdulkerim, then three months old. When Idris failed to return, she panicked. She was alone with an infant in a strange city and had no idea how to find her way home.

Abdulkerim is now nine years old. His younger sisters are Nefise, born in July 2016, and Uyguray, born in June 2019. In their short lives, they have seen their father come and go without explanation. Zeynure has learned to numb her emotions.

“I have had to be strong for the children,” she said.



Turkey as haven​

Zeynure and Idris both came from families that valued education, hers from the south of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, his from the north. Both left the Uyghur homeland on scholarships to study at universities in China’s interior. She earned a diploma in nursing and Idris got his degree in chemistry.

At colleges in third-tier Chinese cities where Uyghurs like them were in the minority, Zeynure and Idris were allowed to practice their religion. She covered her head and wore a long dress. Both visited mosques near campus to pray. She was comforted that both Han Chinese students and staff respected her faith.

Starting around 2011, as Beijing’s policies restricting Islamic observance descended on their hometowns in Xinjiang, Zeynure and Idris each came to the realization that if they wished to continue to practice their faith, they would have to leave China.

A common friend who noticed they shared the same ambition arranged a blind date near Zeynure’s hometown of Kashgar. Idris traveled more than 600 miles to meet the 19-year-old stranger, whose piety and longing to leave China attracted him.

“We were so young and shy then,” Zeynure said, laughing as she recounted sitting opposite each other with their heads down, hardly daring to look up. “In our culture, girls and boys rarely meet alone before marriage, especially in my village. We had nothing to say and just ended up talking about the person who introduced us.”

When the meeting ended, Zeynure had no idea what impression she’d made on Idris as he stood for his long journey home.

“He didn’t say anything to me,” she said.

When Idris called her to suggest they marry, Zeynure agreed immediately. The main draw was his wish to leave China and start afresh somewhere else.

A simple wedding followed and they were on their way. She left via Egypt and he via Malaysia, with a plan to meet in Turkey.



Dreams dashed​

In and out of detention in Turkey all the way through the COVID pandemic, Idris and Zeynure, like many Uyghurs in Turkey, lived in fear that politicians in Ankara were under pressure to hand Uyghurs over to China in exchange for the vaccine. There was talk that Turkey could ratify a proposed extradition treaty with China at any time.

In 2021, the stress became too great and Idris bought a ticket to Morocco that required no visa, hoping that from there he could get to Europe and build a life free from China’s global influence for Zeynure and their young children.

Zeynure explained that despite Idris’s departure from Turkey, the Chinese state had not finished with him. When he landed in North Africa, Moroccan police arrested him, choosing to honor an Interpol Red Notice issued by Beijing.

Red Notice requests intended to catch bona fide criminals fleeing justice in their own lands are prone to abuse, according to a panel convened recently in the U.K. The notices, served by law enforcement worldwide to locate and provisionally arrest a person pending extradition, have been misused by states such as Russia and China to rein in persons deemed enemies of the state, often with very little proof of criminality.

In 2022, a Casablanca court annulled the Red Notice against Idris, citing a lack of evidence to support Beijing’s claims. Still, 23 months after his arrest by Moroccan authorities, Idris remains in prison in Tiflet, 40 miles east of the capital, Rabat, where politicians squabble over his fate with Chinese authorities a continent away.

Zeynure said that her husband’s calls to her are more despondent with each week that passes and that Moroccan prison guards continue regular threats of extradition to China.

Seems like Israel/Jews have fallen out with China has most of the white folks form the "China Project" are of Jewish origin.

 
. . . .
Back
Top Bottom