Responsive Image

Uighurs flee China for Turkey in search of peace

Al Jazeera, 4 February 2015

By Sumeyye Ertekin  Many of the hundreds of ethnic Uighurs who have fled China illegally to escape religious persecution and discrimination have made harrowing journeys to reach Turkey. But those who have finally settled in state housing in the city of Kayseri, in central Turkey, say despite the sufferings of their journey, they needed to escape injustice at home.

The Xinjiang region of western China, called East Turkestan by Uighur separatists, is home to about 10 million Uighurs, a predominantly Muslim ethnic group. Uighurs say they are repressed in their homeland and are unable to practice their religion freely. A 2012 Amnesty International report highlights incidents of “detailed widespread enforced disappearances, torture and ill-treatment of Uighurs” and harsh retribution against those who seek information about missing relatives.

The Chinese authorities say Uighurs are separatists and “terrorists.”

When they first arrive in Istanbul, many of those fleeing Xinjiang are forced to live in cramped conditions, with about six families, or an average of 15 people, per apartment or small house. Observing their miserable conditions, the East Turkestan Culture and Solidarity Charity, a Uighur charity, in cooperation with the governor and mayor of Kayseri decided to allocate to them 100 apartments that were once used as official residences for transportation department employees.

Many charities offer assistance of food and supplies to refugees who stay in these units, and volunteer doctors offer them health services and free medical examinations.

Refugee children, undeterred by the cold weather and muddy ground, play in the garden and try to ride a broken bike. For them and their parents, this a safe haven.

AB: Leaving children behind

When told that journalists would be visiting them, the Uighurs in Kayseri initially refused to discuss how they left China, fearing for the safety of those they left behind. Some ultimately agreed to talk to Al Jazeera, via an interpreter, under the condition that they not be identified.

One man, AB, a former merchant and a father of seven, said he did not register the birth of three of his children, and managed to hide their existence from the state. His youngest was born during the journey to Turkey.

He explains why he left China: “There is no way we can live there anymore. My wife cannot cover her head. We cannot recite Quran, and even prayer is prohibited,” he said.

AB said several of his friends were arrested in police raids on Uighur communities. Fearing he would be arrested soon, he decided to flee, but because he couldn’t obtain a passport, he had to leave illegally — a more dangerous path that means, he said tearfully, leaving his four youngest children behind with a friend.

“We could not take the rest of our children with us because we didn’t know the end of the road we were taking. We didn’t know what was awaiting us on that dangerous trip. I didn’t want to send all my children to their doom,” he said.

“I go out every morning at 7, and I never stop thinking about my children for a moment till I return in the evening. It is not easy to leave your children behind. You can only imagine the amount of injustice that forced us to do so,” he said.

http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/2/3/Uighurs-flee-China-for-Turkey-in-search-of-peace.html