On July 30, Uyghur activists in Belgium held a photo exhibition titled “Xinjiang Police Files” on Wappers street in downtown Brussels to inform the locals about the Uyghur genocide.
Everybody Is Gone is an innovative live event that gives its audiences a unique perspective on the ongoing crisis in the Uyghur Homeland (East Turkistan) – without specifically mentioning China.
On Sunday the 31st of July, over a hundred grassroots Muslim organizations took to the streets and demanded the Chinese communist regime stop the Uyghur genocide by using the hashtag #Stand4Uyghurs.
Leaving the occupied East Turkistan (that China renamed Xinjiang) is impossible for Uyghurs now. The Chinese police confiscated their passports several years ago on the pretext of safeguarding them.
Children learn values and emotions like love, happiness, trust, compassion, and sharing primarily in their families.
Pope Francis has arrived in Canada to apologize for the maltreatment of the indigenous people.
Uyghur poet Ablet Abdureshit Berqi has been sentenced to 13 years in prison.
In a series of tweets, a Norwegian-based Uyghur activist, Abduweli Ayup, highlights the brutal brainwashing of Uyghur children in Chinese state-run boarding schools.
The world-famous fashion brand Dior has recently launched a shirt model that resembles the style of a traditional shirt from the Chinese Ming Dynasty.
The acclaimed poet Gulnisa Imin is serving a 17-year sentence because her work supposedly promotes “separatism.” She’s still writing. By Yasmeen Serhan To read the article, please visit the Atlantic