City
Epaper

East Turkistan govt in exile rejects Uyghur migration plan, calls it part of China's genocidal agenda

By ANI | Updated: February 10, 2025 14:50 IST

Washington DC [US] February 10 : The East Turkistan Government in Exile (ETGE) has rejected the Uyghur migration plan ...

Open in App

Washington DC [US] February 10 : The East Turkistan Government in Exile (ETGE) has rejected the Uyghur migration plan to Turkiye from East Turkistan.

The migration plan was proposed by Professor Erhan Afyoncu, the president of Turkiye's National Defense University.

Urging that the proposal aligns with China's broader agenda, ETGE on its official website stated, "While we acknowledge concerns regarding Turkiye's declining birth rates, we must emphasise that this proposal ultimately serves China's agenda of genocide, colonization, and occupation. It aids China's objective of ethnically cleansing East Turkistan, the cradle of Turkic civilization and the sacred homeland of the Turkic people, by depopulating its native Uyghur population and replacing them with Chinese colonial settlers."

ETGE urged that Turkiye must provide political and strategic support against China's practices of occupation, colonialism, and genocide. ETGE further reiterated that Turkiye should assist the people of East Turkistan in regaining their legitimate independence.

Turkiye hosts one of the largest Uyghur diaspora communities outside China, with Uyghur groups estimating the population to be between 50,000 and 75,000 according to a report published by Voice of America. Since the 1950s, Uyghurs seeking refuge from what they describe as severe repression by the Chinese government have found shelter in Turkiye.

The persecution of Uyghurs in China, particularly in Xinjiang, involves widespread human rights abuses, including mass detentions in "re-education camps," forced labour, and heavy surveillance.

The Chinese government has been accused of religious repression, cultural destruction, and forced assimilation, limiting the Uyghur language, religious practices, and cultural traditions.

Reports indicate family separations, forced indoctrination, and destruction of Uyghur heritage sites. International bodies and human rights organizations have labelled these actions as genocide and crimes against humanity, while China denies these claims, calling them false and part of a campaign to fight extremism.

The situation remains one of the most contentious global human rights issues.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalAnti-war protests erupt in New York after US strikes on Iran; major cities on high alert

InternationalWe cannot - and must not - give up on peace": UN chief Guterres urges de-escalation after US strikes on Iran

InternationalIndian Embassy in Germany celebrates International Day of Yoga

InternationalOperation Sindhu: India to operate 3 more evacuation flights from Iran; 162 Indians in Jordan to return soon

InternationalAfter US strikes on Iran's nuke sites, Trump hints at possible "regime change"

International Realted Stories

InternationalOperation Sindhu: 285 more Indians evacuated from conflict-hit Iran, total reaches 1,713

InternationalPIB Fact Check debunks claims of US using Indian airspace for strikes on nuke sites in Iran, calls them 'fake'

InternationalIndian delegation in Ireland to attend 40th anniversary memorial of Kanishka bombing

InternationalUS: Gunman shot dead after opening fire at Michigan church; one injured

InternationalTrump made decision "minutes before the bombs were dropped" on Iranian nuke sites: Vance