What began in 2016 as a sweeping crackdown under Xi Jinping has become one of the most systematic campaigns of repression against a Muslim minority in modern history.
Since then, up to one million Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region have been subjected to arbitrary detention in so-called “vocational education and training centers” — facilities more accurately described as political reeducation camps and prisons.
Reports by Human Rights Watch and other organisations have documented torture, forced disappearances, intrusive surveillance, cultural and religious persecution, family separation, and forced labour.
In August 2022, the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights concluded that these abuses “may constitute international crimes, in particular crimes against humanity.” Beijing rejected the findings as “illegal and void,” yet conditions remain unchanged.
Broken Families and Silenced Voices
Behind the statistics lie shattered families. Hundreds of thousands of Uyghurs — including intellectuals, cultural figures, and religious leaders — are serving long sentences, many exceeding a decade.
Family contact has been severed. Many Uyghurs abroad have no way of knowing whether their loved ones are alive or dead. WeChat deletions, unanswered calls, and sudden disappearances have become the new normal. In some cases, detainees have been branded “untrustworthy” merely for having relatives abroad.
One such case is Memet Yaqup, a former civil servant from Kumul, who was detained in 2018 and later sentenced to 16 years in prison. His exact whereabouts, condition, and charges remain unknown — a story emblematic of countless others.
Propaganda and Transnational Repression
China’s repression extends beyond its borders. Uyghurs living abroad describe being monitored, intimidated, and cut off from family back home. The practice, known as transnational repression, seeks to silence diaspora voices by threatening their relatives in Xinjiang.
The government has also staged propaganda tours — inviting carefully selected Uyghurs, foreign diplomats, and journalists — to project an image of “normalcy.” Participants have admitted joining such tours out of desperation to see family, fearing it might be their last chance.
At the same time, China continues to block independent observers and U.N. human rights experts from entering Xinjiang, while pressuring diplomats to avoid private meetings with Uyghur advocates abroad.
International Responsibility
Three years after the U.N.’s landmark report, rights groups warn that silence emboldens Beijing. The U.N. Human Rights Council is urged to publish an updated assessment and ensure accountability by pressing for:
- The unconditional release of all individuals arbitrarily detained.
- An end to discriminatory laws and policies targeting Uyghurs.
- Targeted sanctions on senior officials responsible for abuses.
- Full access for independent investigators to the region.
A Call to Conscience
For Uyghur families, the pain is ongoing: grandparents who died without farewells, children growing up without parents, entire communities living under erasure.
The plight of Uyghurs is not just a domestic Chinese issue — it is a test of international resolve against crimes against humanity. Until the prisons and camps are emptied, and basic rights restored, the global community bears a responsibility to act.
As one U.N. expert put it bluntly: “You must not have anyone back home.” That chilling reality is why the fight for Uyghur rights must continue — in Geneva, in national parliaments, and across every platform that still values justice and human dignity.
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How come Turkey B Desh Paki keeping quiet about this. Double standards???
What about e
Why are the Uyghurs helping The West, the Wahabbi NATO Arabs and Israel in Syria? For us muslims or the Zionists pogroms, cirtainly not for Palestine….