Indeed, off topic trolls have frequent appearances on this forum.
Just to humor though:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uyghur_alphabet
Uyghur is a Turkic language spoken in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, administered by China, by the Uyghur people. It is a language with a long literary tradition, and has been written using numerous writing systems through time. Today, an Arabic-derived alphabet is the official writing system used for Uyghur in Xinjiang, but other alphabets are still in use, especially outside Xinjiang.
The Old Uyghur alphabet stayed in use until the 18th century, being used alongside with an Arabic-derived alphabet introduced along with Islam in the 10th century. The Arabic-derived alphabet stayed in use, unlike the Old Uyghur alphabet, and is still in use today, although it was only used little during the mid-20th century.
The Arabic-derived alphabet taken into use first came to be the so-called Chagatai script, which was used for writing the Chagatai language and the Uyghur language, but fell out of use in the early 1920s, when the Uyghur-speaking areas variously became a part of, or under the influence of, the Soviet Union.[1]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkmen_language
Officially, Turkmen currently is rendered in the “Täze Elipbiý”, or “New Alphabet”, which is based on the Latin alphabet. However, the old "Soviet" Cyrillic alphabet is still in wide use. Many political parties in opposition to the authoritarian rule of President Niyazov continued to use the Cyrillic alphabet on websites and publications, most likely to distance themselves from the alphabet that Niyazov created.
Before 1929, Turkmen was written in a modified Arabic alphabet. In 1929–1938 a Latin alphabet replaced it, and then the Cyrillic alphabet was used from 1938 to 1991. In 1991, the current Latin alphabet was introduced, although the transition to it has been rather slow. It originally contained some rather unusual letters, such as the pound, dollar, yen, and cent signs, but these were later replaced by more orthodox letter symbols.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_language
Turkish is written using a modified version of the Latin alphabet introduced in 1928 by Atatürk to replace the Arabic-based Ottoman Turkish alphabet. The Ottoman alphabet marked only three different vowels—long ā, ū and ī—and included several redundant consonants, such as variants of z (which were distinguished in Arabic but not in Turkish). The omission of short vowels in the Arabic script was claimed to make it particularly unsuitable for Turkish, which has eight vowels.
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As you can see, Uighurs in China are the ONLY people in the world still using Turkish written with Arabic alphabets, while all other Turkish groups have been westernized.