Page 4 - Eva Xiao News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Stay updated with breaking news from Eva xiao. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

Top News In Eva Xiao Today - Breaking & Trending Today

Women Detained in Xinjiang Camps Report Systematic Rape | China Digital Times (CDT)


Women Detained in Xinjiang Camps Report Systematic Rape
Posted by Joseph Brouwer | Feb 3, 2021
An investigation by the BBC has uncovered evidence of systemic rape in Xinjiang internment camps, where approximately one million Uyghurs are believed to be or have been imprisoned. In January, on the last day of the Trump administration the U.S. State Department designated persecution in Xinjiang “genocide,” a move that the Biden administration has signaled support for. The shocking allegations in the BBC report include sexual humiliation, gang rape, and electrocution. Matthew Hill, David Campanale, and Joel Gunter report on
[…] “My job was to remove their clothes above the waist and handcuff them so they cannot move,” said Gulzira Auelkhan, crossing her wrists behind her head to demonstrate. “Then I would leave the women in the room and a man would enter – some Chinese man from outside or policeman. I sat silently next to the door, and when the man left the r ....

South Korea , United States , Eva Xiao , Tursunay Ziawudun , Joel Gunter , Sayragul Sauytbay , Gulzira Auelkhan , Yi Xiaocuo Yxiaocuo , Josh Chin , Adrian Zenz , Matthew Hill , Qelbinur Sidik , Jo Smith Finley , Maya Wang , Abdullah Metseydi , Mehmet Okatan , Ghulzira Auyelkhan , David Campanale , Amnesty International , Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Wang Wenbin , U Radio Free Asia Department Of Research , Us State Department , International Society For Human Rights , China National People Congress , Xinjiang Uni , Radio Free Asia Department ,

Tibetan Language Advocate Tashi Wangchuk Released After Five-Year Imprisonment


Tibetan Language Advocate Tashi Wangchuk Released After Five-Year Imprisonment
Posted by Joseph Brouwer | Feb 2, 2021
Five years after his arrest on charges of inciting separatism, Tashi Wangchuk, an advocate for Tibetan-language education, has been released from prison. He attempted to use legal avenues to reinstitute Tibetan-language education in his home county of Yushu, Qinghai Province, a majority-Tibetan area where fewer than 20 percent of people were believed to be literate in Tibetan. He was arrested two months after the release of a 2015 New York Times film documenting his efforts to file a lawsuit in Beijing, and held in pre-trial detention for two years, during which he was allegedly tortured. At his trial in 2018, he argued that “his idea was to use litigation to force local governments to stop ignoring Tibetan language education, and he was exercising his right as a citizen to criticize.” At The New York Times last Friday, Chris Buckley reported on ....

New York , United States , Inner Mongolia , Nei Mongol , San Francisco , South Korea , Jonahm Kessel , Wang Quanzhang , Gerald Roche Gjosephroche , Eva Xiao , James Leibold , Tashi Wangchuk , Eliza Lin , Changhao Wei , Liang Xiaojun , Tashi Shitsetsang , Jonathan Cheng , Shen Chun Yao , Chris Buckley , Tenzin Tselha , Dui Hua Foundation , International Tibet Network , Standing Committee , Affairs Commission , Yale University Law School , Trobe University ,

Beijing Accelerates Campaign of Ethnic Assimilation


Dec. 31, 2020 11:23 am ET
To realize the China of his dreams, Xi Jinping wants to meld the nation’s dozens of ethnic groups into a singular national identity.
The program of aggressive cultural assimilation or “ethnic fusion,” as it’s called in government documents and speeches has gone to extremes in the northwestern region of Xinjiang, home to the largest mass detention of a minority group since World War II. The campaign has begun to spread and intensify in other ethnically diverse areas.
In Inner Mongolia, a plan to expand Mandarin-language education and mandate the use of national textbooks over local versions sparked protests and school boycotts among students and parents concerned that the Mongolian language was in danger of being erased. ....

United States , Hong Kong , France General , Tibet Autonomous Region , Inner Mongolia , Nei Mongol , Hainan Island , Eva Xiao , Chun Han Wong , Joseph Stalin , James Leibold , Muslim Hui , Eliza Lin , Michael Nicholson Corbis Getty , Mao Zedong , Jonathan Cheng , Dilnur Reyhan , Adrian Zenz , Xinjiang Uighurs , Founder International Co , Trobe University , National Bureau Of Statistics , World Bank , Tibet Public Security Bureau , National Institute For Oriental Languages , United Front Work Department ,