Uyghur organizations denounced the World Muslim Communities Council’s cooperation with China, calling it hypocrisy and urging global Muslim communities to resist Beijing’s propaganda and occupation.
Posts published in “Uyghurs”
Radio Free Asia’s Uyghur Service has shut down, but journalists like Shohret Hoshur vow to continue exposing China’s genocide until East Turkistan is free.
Uyghur youth gathered in Istanbul for a 9-day training on “International Conjuncture and National Struggle Methods,” organized by the Uyghur Academy.
Campaign for Uyghurs marked the International Day Commemorating the Victims of Acts of Violence Based on Religion or Belief, highlighting the plight of the Uyghur people facing systematic persecution in East Turkistan.
US cracks down on Chinese goods tied to Uyghur forced labor, also targeting steel, copper, lithium, caustic soda, and red dates as high-priority enforcement under the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act.
New study reveals China using media, diplomacy, and social networks across MENA to promote its narratives and hide abuses against Uyghurs.
China's communist government is responsible for "genocide and crimes against humanity" targeting ethnic and religious minorities, according to the US State Department's annual human rights report.
Uyghur and Tibetan leaders meet in Boston to discuss joint strategies against Chinese repression, reaffirming Uyghur–Tibetan solidarity in the fight for freedom and human rights.
It is clear that the seven years of repression, the countless disappearances, and the blood that was shed cannot be completely covered with a touristic makeover. Image management cannot erase the memory of history. The belief that one day this account will be settled remains alive.
Kmart Australia faces court action as a Uyghur group states the retailer may source from factories linked to forced labour in East Turkistan, challenging its “ethical sourcing” claims.
Award-winning journalist John Beck’s Those Who Should Be Seized Should Be Seized reveals China’s ongoing genocide against Uyghurs and other Turkic peoples through powerful personal stories and official documents.
UGASA, a new bipartisan U.S. bill, aims to confront China’s genocide against Uyghurs. Uyghur organizations welcomed the move, urging swift action from Congress.
Uyghur poet Abide Abbas Nesrin participated as the first Uyghur poet in the Měsíc Autorského čtení (Month of Author Readings) literary festival, which has a 25-year history in Europe.
The International East Turkistan NGOs Union held a meeting in Istanbul and elected its new president and board members.
Experts from across the globe met in London to discuss preventing Chinese transnational repression, focusing on the Uyghur diaspora. They proposed legal reforms, safe reporting mechanisms, international cooperation, and victim support.
On the 11th anniversary of the Yarkand massacre, the World Uyghur Congress commemorated one of the deadliest crackdowns in East Turkistan since the 2009 Urumchi unrest, urging the international community to take action against ongoing atrocities.
At HRC59, CFU hosted a compelling panel on China’s transnational repression, bringing together Uyghur, Tibetan, and Hong Kong activists to expose the CCP’s global intimidation tactics and urge international protection.
A Kazakh man from East Turkistan, who was arrested for expressing a historical fact during an online discussion, recounted the severe torture he endured and said that he had witnessed a Uyghur being tortured to death before.

















