ANI
01 Jun 2026, 16:33 GMT+10
Munich [Germany], June 1 (ANI): The latest weekly brief from the World Uyghur Congress highlighted several key developments concerning the Uyghur community and ongoing concerns about China's policies in East Turkistan. First, the brief reported strong criticism from 20 Uyghur organisations and Turkish support groups over the visit of Chinese Consul General Wei Xiaodong to the Kucukcekmece Municipality in Istanbul.
The groups accused the Chinese diplomat of promoting Beijing's narrative about East Turkistan and described the visit as an example of transnational repression and political pressure targeting the Uyghur diaspora in Turkiye. They called on Turkish authorities to closely monitor Chinese diplomatic activities.
The brief also warned of a surge in phishing attempts, impersonation schemes, and disinformation campaigns targeting Uyghur organisations and activists ahead of the International Uyghur Forum 2026. The World Uyghur Congress and the Uyghur Center for Democracy and Human Rights stated that these efforts appear aimed at intimidating Uyghur voices and disrupting international advocacy efforts, but stressed that such tactics would not deter their work.
In connection with Eid al-Adha, the WUC extended greetings to Muslims worldwide while drawing attention to the situation of Uyghurs who remain separated from their families and homeland. The organisation emphasised that many Uyghurs in East Turkistan are unable to freely observe religious and cultural traditions and called on governments and civil society groups to show solidarity with Uyghur Muslims.
The weekly update also highlighted a meeting held on May 28 between Uyghur advocacy leaders and officials at the United States Department of State. Participants discussed allegations of ongoing genocide against Uyghurs and concerns over China's expanding campaign of transnational repression affecting Uyghur communities around the world.
Finally, the brief drew attention to a recent investigation published by the Financial Times, which examined the current situation in East Turkistan. According to the report, China's policies have evolved beyond mass internment camps into a broader system involving prisons, surveillance, forced labour, cultural assimilation, family separation, and restrictions on Uyghur language and identity. Researchers cited in the investigation argue that these measures continue to threaten the survival of Uyghur culture, while China maintains that its policies are necessary for security and stability.
Overall, the weekly brief underscored concerns about transnational repression, cybersecurity threats, restrictions on Uyghur religious and cultural freedoms, international advocacy efforts, and continuing allegations of human rights abuses in East Turkistan. (ANI)
Get a daily dose of Business Sun news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Business Sun.
More InformationBEIJING, China: China is stepping up efforts to expand the use of its digital yuan both domestically and internationally, according...
NEW YORK, New York - U.S. stocks rallied to fresh all-time highs on Friday, capping a winning week with broad-based gains as the Dow...
NEW YORK, New York - U.S. stock markets closed higher Thursday, with the Nasdaq Composite and Standard and Poor's 500 each hitting...
TAIPEI, Taiwan: Nvidia plans to spend as much as US$150 billion annually in Taiwan as the company deepens its role in the global artificial...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: Americans are increasingly cutting back on spending despite U.S. stock markets hovering near record highs, as elevated...
NEW YORK, New York - U.S. stock markets posted modest gains on Wednesday, with all three major indexes closing in positive territory....
SAN FRANCISCO, California: Microsoft and Nvidia are expected to unveil the first Windows personal computers powered by Nvidia-designed...
SINGAPORE: The United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia are working together to build unmanned underwater vehicles under their...
NEW YORK CITY, New York: Meta's effort to train artificial intelligence systems using detailed records of employee computer activity...
LONDON, UK: Chinese online retailer Temu has been fined 200 million euros (US$232 million) by the European Union after regulators found...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: The U.S. Postal Service has signed a multi-year agreement with DHL eCommerce for last-mile parcel delivery services...
TAIPEI, Taiwan: Nvidia plans to spend as much as US$150 billion annually in Taiwan as the company deepens its role in the global artificial...
