Excruciating details of family separation, gang rape, mass sterilisation and now forced marriage continue to cast a deep shadow over the everyday lives of Uyghur women of China, with the diaspora of traumatised exiles still grieving.
Book Club: Seldom do we hear of what happens in China's re-education camps, let alone able to read an eye-witness account. Gulbahar Haitiwaji's text is therefore an essential resource to both document Chinese atrocities, and bring them to account.
Beijing continues its tirade against Uyghur and Turkic peoples through its systematic campaign of genocide. Yet its tentacles have since extended abroad, where those who have successfully fled persecution now face extradition back to China.
International efforts to hold China accountable for the genocide currently being committed against the Uyghur people have largely been evaded, however diplomatic boycotts and protests against the upcoming Winter Olympics in Beijing persist.
Muslim countries continue to show a blind eye to the Uyghur genocide, as two Uyghur businessmen could be deported back to China from Saudi Arabia. As economic and political ties between the two blocs flourish, concern for human rights whittles away.
In a calculated attempt to divert attention away from the atrocities committed against the Uyghur peoples in North-West China, state-backed media outlets have intensified their efforts to disseminate pro-Chinese propaganda at home and abroad.
Violently forced from their homes, Uyghur women are left facing a future deprived of family, culture and belongings. °®Âþµº speaks with those able to make it to Istanbul, torn between safety and the yearning for their homeland.
Despite escaping China's systematic oppression in Xinjiang, those lucky to have made their way to the safety of Istanbul have since been plagued by homelessness and addiction. °®Âþµº speaks with those on the streets and local initiatives.
Leaked documents proving systematic attempts to surveil the Uyghur people in Xinjiang are at risk of being wiped from public records, according to a new report. The need to publicise China's atrocities has therefore become ever more pressing.
Blind to the mounting wave of evidence concerning atrocities against the Uyghurs, Muslim nations continue not only to turn a blind eye to the suffering of their fellow believers but also lavish praise on their persecutors.