China focuses on friendly media and diplomats to ‘narrate the Xinjiang narrative

China focuses on friendly media and diplomats to ‘narrate the Xinjiang narrative

Albanian-Canadian historian and⁣ journalist Olsi Jazexhi⁤ believed in early 2019 that reports about human ⁤rights ‍violations in the Xinjiang Uighur ⁤Autonomous Region (Xinjiang) ⁣of Western China were lies.

Accounts from⁢ people ‌who ‍had fled the area ‌as well as reports from human rights organisations were painting a picture of ​human rights ⁣abuses being perpetrated on a massive scale. Muslim‍ minorities in Xinjiang – the majority of whom are Turkic-speaking Uighurs – were reportedly being deprived of basic freedoms, their cultural and religious heritage ‍was being destroyed and at least 1 million of⁤ them had been‌ interned in​ a vast network of⁤ detention⁢ camps.

Accounts from people who had fled the ‌area as well as reports from‌ human rights organisations were painting a picture of human rights abuses being perpetrated on a massive scale. ‌Muslim minorities ‍in Xinjiang – the majority ​of whom are⁤ Turkic-speaking Uighurs – were reportedly being deprived of basic freedoms, their cultural and religious⁣ heritage was being destroyed and at least ⁤1 million of them had been interned in a vast ‍network of detention camps.

The international community had taken notice and the United Nations had raised its ⁢concerns.

But Jazexhi ⁢was unconvinced.

“I was ⁣certain that the stories were a ‌scheme constructed⁣ by the US and the West to discredit China and​ divert attention away from their own ⁣human rights records regarding Muslims,” he told Al Jazeera.

The Chinese government⁣ itself vehemently rejected the ‍allegations, acknowledging the ​existence of the camps but describing them as vocational⁣ skills training centres necessary to combat alleged extremism.

Article from www.aljazeera.com

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