China is deliberately destroying the identity of Uyghurs and Tibetans: report


Beijing, Ta. 19 July 2020, Sunday

China at one time was at war for 50 years before the last century but now it has occupied the territories of more than half a dozen border countries. Xi Jinping has combined the Chinese adventure of regionalism with the great Maoist dream of conquering the whole world.

The ongoing conflict at the LAC is just another horrific attempt to promote a regionalist agenda. Xi Jinping is leading a systematic effort to separate minority provinces on the border, along with destroying minority identities under a special policy.

What he has done with the minority provinces of Tibet and East Turkestan (Xinjiang) to destroy sexual identity will come to light. Jinping and the Standing Committee of the Politburo are emphasizing the need for four identities among ethnic minorities that are synonymous with identity with the motherland, Chinese nation, Chinese culture, and building a socialist path with Chinese characteristics.

Several fast-track initiatives have been launched following the demographics of Tibet and East Turkestan, along with the destruction of sexual and religious cultures under Jinping's rule. The second Xinjiang Work Forum, held in Beijing on May 28 and 29, 2014, was attended by more than 300 top party officials and the Politburo. It was decided to strengthen the party structure in the minority-majority areas and to accelerate inter-sectoral travel among other measures.

In the same year, a new policy was introduced in Turkmenistan to promote interracial marriage by introducing 10,000 RMB per year to interracial couples with Camo County and other social security benefits. The move was tantamount to an attempt to attack the region's unique culture and identity.

The Han population is growing in Tibet and East Turkestan to ensure official control over these minority provinces. In Tibet, Han is settled in such a way that he has defeated the Buddhists. In the same way the Han community is now overpopulating the Uyghur and Turk communities in eastern Turkestan, especially in the border areas.

Cases of human rights violations have also been on the rise since Jinping's coronation. The 2009 violence killed 197 people and the 2013 and 2014 violence killed 110 and 308 people, respectively. At least 50 people lost their lives in an attack in the Aksu region in September 2015. Similarly, more than 129 cases of self-harm by Tibetan Buddhists have come to light since 2011 when several religious leaders were forcibly taken into custody.

China has relied heavily on monitoring techniques to suppress dissidents. Citizens of both regions are forced to use the monitoring app Jigwangveshi which tracks and monitors them in real time. In addition to tracking, it also monitors employment status. It also records the use of transport, visiting religious places, etc.

Despite the dissatisfaction of Islamic communities in East Turkestan, China is pursuing the process of Arabization, and Islamic customs and hajj, madrassa education, etc., have been branded as extremist. The first wave of Muslim genocide was widespread in the 1980s, in which Islamic leaders and preachers were identified, targeted and killed in deadly riots. The assassination of Muslim leaders resurfaced in 2009 and continues to this day with the elimination of all religious leaders.

Minorities are segregated not only religiously but also socially and culturally. The Uyghur community has been fragmented throughout the communist nation, and Uyghurs have been banned from staying or eating in Han hotels in East Turkestan.

The government recently issued a notice banning 29 names for Uyghur children who were considered ultra-Islamic or non-Chinese. The government has banned the burqa in public places as part of another similar effort to destroy Uyghur identity.

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