Uyghur Turks in The US Protest The 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics

Published February 6th, 2022 - 10:18 GMT
Uyghur Turks in US protest 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics
A placard representing razor wire shaping and Olympic rings are seen next to a sign of the Olympics Museum during a protest organized by Tibetan and Uyghur activists against Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics, in Lausanne as some 200 participants took part to the protest. (AFP / Fabrice COFFRINI)

Uyghur Turks in the U.S. protested the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics in front of the White House on Saturday Feb. 5, 2022. Uyghur Turks criticized the Chinese government and accused it of carrying out “genocide" in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.

Demonstrators carried East Turkestan flags and chanted "Freedom to East Turkestan" and "Boycott China's genocide Olympics.”

Protestors also criticized the U.S. International Olympic Committee and media outlets such as the NBC network that is broadcasting the Games in the United States.

They demanded that the International Criminal Court investigate genocide and crimes against humanity committed against Uyghur people.

China's Practices in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region

Uyghur Turks in US Protest 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics
Tibetan and Uyghur activists hold placards and wear masks during a protest against Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics.  (AFP / Fabrice COFFRINI)

 

Violations against the identity and culture of Uyghur Turks in China have been criticized by the international community in recent years.

Many Uyghur Turks are kept against their will in places that Beijing calls "vocational training centers" and the international community defines as "re-education camps".

Beijing does not provide information on how many camps there are in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, how many people there are and how many have returned to social life.

While the UN and other international organizations have reiterated their calls for the camps to be opened for scrutiny, China has so far allowed a few of the camps it designated itself to be partially viewed by a small number of foreign diplomats and journalists.

Chinese authorities are refusing UN officials' requests to freely investigate the region for direct information.

 

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