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Turkey summons China's envoy over Uyghur tweets
by AFP Staff Writers
Ankara (AFP) April 6, 2021

Turkey on Tuesday summoned China's ambassador after his office took to social media to denounce two top Turkish politicians over their criticism of Beijing's crackdown on Uyghurs in Xinjiang.

The Chinese embassy said it "strongly" condemned Good Party leader Meral Aksener and Ankara mayor Mansur Yavas for posting tweets commemorating a deadly April 1990 conflict between Uyghur separatists and Chinese government forces.

Accounts of those events vary but they are believed to have been followed by mass arrests of Uyghurs, tens of thousands of whom have since taken refuge in Turkey.

Aksener, who forms part of the right-wing opposition to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, tweeted that Turks "will not remain silent to the oppression."

Turks will fight for the "absolute independence" of the Uyghurs' self-proclaimed republic of East Turkestan, Aksener said.

Yavas, who is a leading member of the main opposition CHP party, tweeted the Turks "feel the pain of the massacre in East Turkestan as if it happened today".

In its account of the 1990 standoff, Amnesty International said "protests and rioting, reportedly led by members of an Islamic nationalist group, resulted in many deaths".

The Chinese ambassador Liu Shaobin was summoned by Turkey's foreign ministry after his office said that "the Chinese side reserves the right to respond" to Aksener and Yavas's comments.

"China is opposed with determination to any challenge by any individual or power to its sovereignty and territorial integrity," the Chinese embassy tweeted, tagging Aksener and Yavas's Twitter accounts.

The Turkish foreign ministry conveyed Ankara's "unease" over the embassy's tweet, press reports said.

Rights groups believe at least one million Uyghurs and other mostly Muslim minorities have been incarcerated in camps spread out across China's northwestern Xinjiang region.

Turkey's cultural bonds with the Uyghurs have made it a favoured destination for avoiding persecution in Xinjiang.

But many in the 50,000-strong community express unease over Ankara's growing dependence on Chinese investments and coronavirus vaccines.

Last month, hundreds of Uyghurs rallied in Istanbul to protest a visit by Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi for meetings with Erdogan and Turkish officials in Ankara.


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China's 'wolf warrior' diplomats howl at Xinjiang critics
Beijing (AFP) April 5, 2021
China's "wolf warrior" diplomats are back after a brief lull, firing insults over Twitter, smearing critics and suggesting conspiracies. The hyperactivity of the envoys follows renewed global pressure over Beijing's treatment of the Muslim Uyghur minority in China's Xinjiang region. Here are five things to know as the wolf warriors once more bare their teeth: - When did it start? - The term "wolf warrior diplomacy" became common parlance in 2019, when Chinese envoys - most prominently s ... read more

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