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News ID: 63008
Publish Date : 11 February 2019 - 21:47

Turkey, China Clash Over Situation of Uighurs



BEIJING (AFP) -- Turkey’s foreign ministry had released a statement on Saturday severely criticizing China’s mass detentions of its Turkic-speaking Uighurs, and claiming that poet Abdurehim Heyit had died serving an eight-year Chinese prison sentence imposed as punishment over "one of his songs”.
But China on Monday released a video showing a man who identified himself as Heyit and saying that he was alive and well.
"China has made solemn representations toward Turkey. We hope the relevant Turkish persons can distinguish between right and wrong and correct their mistakes,” Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said during a daily press briefing.
She called the Turkish statement "vile” and urged Ankara to withdraw its "false accusations”.
"I saw his (Heyit’s) video online yesterday, showing that he is not only alive but also very healthy,” she said.
A UN panel of experts has said that nearly one million Uighurs and other Turkic-speaking minorities had been herded into "re-education camps” in China’s northwestern Xinjiang region, where most of the country’s more than 10 million Uighurs live.
Turkey had said China’s treatment of Uighurs was "a great embarrassment for humanity” — perhaps the strongest condemnation yet from a Muslim country.
The Muslim world has been conspicuously quiet on the Uighur issue, possibly to avoid Chinese diplomatic or economic retaliation.
The plight of China’s Uighurs is closely followed in Turkey due to shared linguistic, cultural and religious links and the presence of tens of thousands of ethnic Uighurs there.
Xinjiang has come under intensifying police surveillance in recent years following repeated riots, bombings and attacks on Chinese security forces and civilians.
Beijing at first denied any Xinjiang detention camps existed, but later admitted people were being sent to what it calls "vocational education centers”.
The Turkish foreign ministry statement said Uighurs were being "subjected to torture and political brainwashing in concentration centres and prisons”.
Hua, however, appeared to leave the door open to patching up the row, saying the two sides should endeavor to maintain "mutual trust and cooperation”.