Families of Uyghur editors slam China over documentary grossly misrepresenting them ANI | Updated: May 12, 2021 07:28 IST
Beijing [China], May 12 (ANI): Families of former Uyghur textbook editors, who have been accused of incorporating ethnically charged and separatist views into classroom literature, say that a pro-Beijing media outlet s recent documentary grossly misrepresents them.
The Chinese state media last month aired a 10-minute documentary, accusing former Uyghur publishing officials and senior editors of incorporating extremist separatist thoughts into children s educational materials as early as 2003, wrote Asim Kashgarian for Voice of America.
Kamalturk Yalqun, son of the now-imprisoned editor Yalqun Rozi, said that reading the books was purely a happy literary adventure for him and there was nothing to incite hatred or radicalism.
Families of former Uyghur editors slam China
12 May 2021, 12:18 GMT+10
Beijing [China], May 12 (ANI): Families of former Uyghur textbook editors, who have been accused of incorporating ethnically charged and separatist views into classroom literature, say that a pro-Beijing media outlet s recent documentary grossly misrepresents them.
The Chinese state media last month aired a 10-minute documentary, accusing former Uyghur publishing officials and senior editors of incorporating extremist separatist thoughts into children s educational materials as early as 2003, wrote Asim Kashgarian for Voice of America.
Kamalturk Yalqun, son of the now-imprisoned editor Yalqun Rozi, said that reading the books was purely a happy literary adventure for him and there was nothing to incite hatred or radicalism.
The Asian Development Bank will increase its focus on adaptation and resilience to climate change in response to the growing threat facing Asia and the Pacific.
Researchers decipher the molecular underpinning of exceptional responses in glioblastoma patients
Despite access to some of the best possible medical care in the world, Senators John McCain and Edward Kennedy both died within 18 months of their diagnosis of glioblastoma, an aggressive form of brain cancer. While this deadly outcome typifies the nature of this disease, some glioblastoma patients see exceptional benefits from chemotherapy and survive beyond expectations. Why this happens has been revealed by researchers at the University of Minnesota in a new study published in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Deciphering the molecular underpinning of these exceptional responses may hold the key to transforming the hope for miracles into the reality of an expected cure for glioblastoma patients, said Clark C. Chen, MD, PhD, Lyle French Chair in Neurosurgery and head of the Department of Neurosurgery at the University of Minnesota Medical School, who is also le