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Hundreds protest in Istanbul against China's Uighur treatment
by Staff Writers
Istanbul (AFP) Oct 1, 2020

Hundreds of demonstrators took to the streets of Istanbul on Thursday to protest China's treatment of mainly Muslim Uighurs in Xinjiang, an AFP journalist said.

Around 500 people gathered at the city's Beyazit square, holding up pictures of their missing families and unfurled banners reading: "Where's my family?", "Free my family" and "Shut down concentration camps!"

The group, which included children, called for an end to the crackdown in China's northwestern region -- where more than one million Uighurs and other mostly Muslim Turkic-speaking residents are believed to be held in camps.

China is running hundreds of detention centres in northwest Xinjiang across a network that is much bigger than previously thought, according to research presented last month by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) thinktank.

The number of facilities is around 40 percent greater than previous estimates, the research said, and has been growing despite China's claims that many Uighurs have been released.

Beijing has denied the existence of detention sites. The government says they are vocational training centres used to counter extremism.

Not many Muslim leaders have openly criticised the treatment of Uighurs with the exception of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, which has linguistic and cultural connections with the Uighurs.

Mukerrem Kutar, one of the protesters holding up pictures of her missing relatives, said: "I cannot get news from my family, I have no news at all from my brother, his son and their whole family."

She told AFP: "I have no idea if they are alive, dead, in camps. I want to find out where they are."

Yunus Abduzahir, 25 and a student, said he had lost contact with his family since 2006.

"The last time I heard from them, my mother, my father and my older brother were detained and my brother was sent to a forced labour camp," he said.

"My mother, had to leave her two-year-old kid and had to live in a different city, I don't know where she is... She had a two-year-old she had to look after, but I imagine that in spite of that they took her and sent her to a concentration camp."


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THE STANS
US House votes to force firms to disclose Xinjiang products
Washington (AFP) Sept 30, 2020
The US House of Representatives voted Wednesday to force companies to disclose products that come from China's Xinjiang region, in a new bid to stop what lawmakers say is widespread forced labor in the restive area. The bill follows a broader act approved a week earlier that aims to ban imports from Xinjiang, contending that abuses of the Uighur people are so widespread that all goods from the region should be considered made with slave labor. "The exploitation and enslavement of the Uighurs mus ... read more

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