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Beijing: Erdoğan call Uighurs terrorism pledged to help china combat terrorism, draws barrage of criticism in Turkey

July 30, 2015 By administrator

Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) and Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan

Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) and Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s use of the term “terrorism” in reference to Uighurs — an ethnic Turkic minority in western China — while in Beijing where he pledged to cooperate with the Chinese government to combat terrorism, including activities by the East Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM), have drawn fierce criticism from the Turkish public as well as opposition lawmakers.
Erdoğan, according to a news report which appeared in the official Chinese news agency Xinhua, stressed that “the Turkish government sticks to the one-China policy, supports China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and opposes the terrorist activities of the East Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM) aimed at China.”
“The Turkish government firmly supports China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, opposes terrorist activities — such as those of the East Turkestan Islamic Movement — that target China and will protect the relationship from being “distracted,” Erdoğan said,” reported the China daily in another story covering the Turkish president’s visit.

For a leader who only years ago accused China of carrying out a “genocide” against Uighurs –Turkic people with whom Turks share cultural and religious bonds — this turnaround has seemed striking and unleashed a barrage of criticism in Turkey.

Source: ZAMAN

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: China, Erdogan, terrorism, Uighurs

Chinese police shoot dead ‘terrorist’ Uighurs Islamist militants

July 14, 2015 By administrator

0,,18567082_303,00Officers in Shenyang have killed three Uighur men who they say were Islamist militants. Activists have said that Uighurs are merely being discriminated against by a “hostile” governmen,

Police officers in the northeastern Chinese city of Shenyang shot and killed three Uighur men carrying knives and injured a fourth on Monday evening, according to the local government and state media. They reported that the men were shouting about Islamic holy war, but declined to give any further details of the incident.

“When police pursued the terrorist suspects, four terrorists armed with knives resisted arrest. Police fired shots only after the terrorists ignored warnings,” read an online statement from the Shenyang public security bureau before it was taken down without explanation. report DW.com

State-run Beijing News, citing the provincial government, said the police had killed the militants when they resisted them during a raid.

“When the police tried to enter to investigate, four terrorists wearing headgear, holding knives and crying out ‘jihad’ hacked at the police,” the Beijing News said. The news outlet reported that the men were from Xinjiang, the primary homeland of the Muslim Uighur minority, and that the “accompanying children” as well as one woman, also from Xinjiang, had been apprehended by authorities.

Minority Uighurs targeted

Activists say that Uighurs, targeted as separatists by the Chinese government, are simply fleeing violence in Xinjiang, where hundreds have died in recent years. The government blames the strife on Islamic militants and says Uighurs want to create their own breakaway state.

In a statement about Monday’s incident, Dilxat Raxit, a spokesman for the exile group World Uyghur Congress wrote: “The accusation that they are suspected terrorists exposes China’s hostile and discriminatory attitude.”

“China’s barbarian policy of shooting people dead before judicial interrogation should be prevented by the international community,” said Raxit.

es/msh (AP, Reuters)

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: China, terrorist, Uighurs

China says Uighurs being sold as ISIL’s given Turkish identity papers in Southeast Asia

July 11, 2015 By administrator

BEIJING – Reuters,

_84151907_84151906Uighurs from China’s Xinjiang are being given Turkish identity papers in Southeast Asia by Turkish diplomats and then taken to Turkey where some are sold to fight for groups like the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) as “cannon fodder,” a senior Chinese official said.

Beijing says the Turkic language-speaking Uighur minority are firstly Chinese nationals, and those who flee China should be returned to their home region in the far west of the country bordering central Asia.

“Turkish embassies in Southeast Asia will give them proof of identity,” Tong Bishan, division chief of the Ministry of Public Security’s Criminal Investigation Department, told a small group of foreign reporters in Beijing on July 11.

“They are obviously Chinese but they will give them identities as Turkish nationals.”

The accusation is likely to further anger Ankara, already alarmed by the return of more than 100 Uighurs to China from Thailand this week.

Some Turks see themselves as sharing a common cultural and religious heritage with their Uighur “brothers”.

Hundreds, possibly thousands, of Uighurs keen to escape unrest in China’s western Xinjiang region, have travelled clandestinely via Southeast Asia to Turkey. China is home to about 20 million Muslims spread across its vast territory, only a portion of whom are Uighurs.

Tong said that hundreds of Uighurs had been given documents by Turkish diplomats, especially in Kuala Lumpur, and then allowed into Turkey.

Neither the Turkish Foreign Ministry nor the Turkish embassy in Kuala Lumpur were able to immediately provide comment.

‘Youths brainswashed’

But upon arriving, they have no chance of finding legal work and some end up with extremist groups, Tong said, like the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, which Beijing accuses of waging an insurrection campaign in Xinjiang to set up their own state.

“They are very easily controlled by certain local forces, especially the East Turkestan Islamic Movement and other terrorist groups. They organise the youths, they brainwash them, and get them to the front line to fight. They are cannon fodder,” Tong said.

“There is competition for them. Some are sent to Iraq, some to Syria. The terrorist groups there lack people. They will snatch people away. The terrorist groups will pay, at least $2,000 a person. It’s their way of recruiting soldiers.”

Tong, who has been helping lead the Chinese effort to get Uighurs in Southeast Asia back to China, said he did not know how many Uighurs were now fighting for ISIL.

But he said that they have found propaganda videos and messages on the mobile phones and computers of some of those who have been returned, including pictures of dead fighters and promises of the joys to come in the afterlife.

“We are providing education and support, to tell them what real Islam is about. They’ve been listening to and watching stuff on the Internet, from irregular imams.”

Attempt to ‘demonize’ China

Numerous groups have been sent back to China this year from Southeast Asia, Tong said, including the 109 repatriated from Thailand this week. He did not have a full figure for the numbers deported.

The deportations have sparked sometimes violent protests in Turkey, home to a large Uighur diaspora.

The United States and United Nations have condemned the deportations and asked Thailand to stop them, saying the Uighurs could face harsh treatment in China.

Beijing denies the accusations of human rights groups that it restricts the Uighurs’ religious freedoms. It blames Islamist militants for a rise in violent attacks in Xinjiang in the past three years in which hundreds have died.

Tong said that concern the Uighurs would be mistreated upon their return was simply an attempt to “demonize” China, and said they were being well looked after, though those suspected of crimes will be prosecuted.

Attacks in Turkey trigger debate

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who is due to visit China, said on July 9 that news reports on China’s alleged restrictions on Muslim Uighurs during the holy month of Ramadan do not reflect reality. He said that the timing of the reports was “meaningful,” referring to his upcoming visit.

Erdoğan’s words come amid a spike in attacks against East Asian tourists and others in Turkey.  Hours after he delivered his speech, Thailand on July 10 closed its embassy and consulate in Turkey after a violent protest against its deportation of Uighur Muslims to China. It was the latest protest in Turkey over the treatment of Uighurs.

July/11/2015

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: chiana, ISIL, Turkey, Uighurs

China slams Turkey for offer to shelter Uighurs

November 28, 2014 By administrator

BEIJING – Reuters

n_74978_1A motorcyclist and child ride against wind and snow in Balikun, Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region. Turkey has offered to shelter around 200 Uighurs found in a human-smuggling camp in Thailand, irking the Chinese government. REUTERS Photo

China has lashed out at Turkey for offering shelter to roughly 200 Uighurs from the western Chinese region of Xinjiang who were rescued from a human-smuggling camp in Thailand.

Thai police found the group in March and Chinese officials  identified “dozens” of them as Uighurs, a Muslim people from Xinjiang who speak a Turkic language. Many Uighurs chafe at government curbs on their culture and religion.

Turkey’s state-run Anadolu news agency on Nov. 26 reported a request by Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu for Thailand to send the Uighurs there, a move that angered China, which views their move to Thailand as “illegal immigration.”

Turkey asked ‘not to meddle’

Asked for a response on Turkey’s offer, China’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said the case was a matter for China and Thailand and “the relevant country” should stop interfering.

“We urge the relevant country to immediately stop meddling in placement work for the relevant case, be cautious with words and actions and not send out mistaken signals that connive in, and even support, illegal immigration activities,” Hua said in a faxed statement to Reuters.

“Illegal immigration activities disrupt the normal orderly flow of people internationally, harm the interests of the international community, and can harm security of the relevant countries and regions,” Hua added.

Small numbers of Uighurs trickling out of China to Southeast Asia are believed to go overland into Laos or Myanmar, before going to Thailand and elsewhere.

Turkey is home to thousands of Uighurs who have fled Xinjiang since the Chinese Communists took over the region in 1949. It has projected itself as a stable Muslim democracy, a key player at a time of turmoil and unrest in the Middle East.

“I brought the issue to the notice of the Thai foreign minister in New York and the Chinese foreign minister in Beijing as well, and told them Turkey wants to shelter those Uighurs,” Anadolu Agency cited Foreign Minister Çavuşoğlu as saying.

In the past two years, hundreds of people have been killed in unrest in Xinjiang, prompting a crackdown by authorities.

November/28/2014

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: China, Turkey, Uighurs, warning

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