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Turkey raises Uyghur rights at meeting with China FM

Turkey raises Uyghur rights at meeting with China FM

Middle East Monitor. 25 March 2021

Below is an article published by Middle East Monitor. Photo:Dursun Aydemir/Anadolu Agency.

Turkey raised the issue of Uyghur Muslims during talks with China’s foreign minister in Ankara today, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said, as hundreds of Uyghurs protested against the treatment of their ethnic kin in China, Reuters reported.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi met Cavusoglu and later President Tayyip Erdogan as around 1,000 protesters gathered in Istanbul chanting “Dictator China” and “Stop Uighur Genocide, Close the Camps”. Some waved blue-and-white flags of the independence movement of East Turkestan, the name by which the movement refers to Xinjiang.

“We are here to ask about our families. Why can’t we get in touch with our families? Are they dead or alive? Where are they? Are they at camps or outside?” said Imam Hasan Ozturk, a Uyghur protester.

China approved an extradition treaty with Turkey in December and with the deal awaiting ratification by Ankara’s parliament, activists among some 40,000 Uyghurs living in Turkey have stepped up efforts to highlight their plight, holding regular protests in Ankara and Istanbul.

Cavusoglu, who has denied that the extradition accord would lead to Uyghurs being sent back to China, said after meeting Wang he had conveyed “our sensitivity and thoughts on Uyghur Turks”, adding that Ankara and Beijing would enhance cooperation against the COVID-19 pandemic and on vaccines.

Uyghurs’ worries have been fuelled by Ankara’s dependence on China for COVID-19 vaccines, having received 15 million doses from Sinovac Biotech and ordered tens of millions more. This week, Turkey received 1.4 million doses of the vaccine developed by Germany’s BioNTech, the first significant batch of non-Chinese vaccines.

UN experts estimate at least a million Uyghurs and other Muslims are held in detention centres in northwest China’s Xinjiang. The United States said in January China has committed “genocide and crimes against humanity” by repressing Uighurs.

China denies accusations of abuses in Xinjiang, and has said the complexes it set up in the region provided vocational training to help stamp out Islamist extremism and separatism.