Even Hollywood could not escape the CCP: regime’s cheerleader Donnie Yen was among the presenters at the Oscars, notwithstanding widespread requests to “disinvite” him.
Op-eds China
Will Human Rights in China Become a Casualty of Brexit?
The British government is gearing itself up to free the country from the “shackles” of European law and pave the way for business UK-style; but human rights and “foreign threats” are getting in the way.
Xinjiang Governor Erkin Tuniyaz: Slave to Beijing, Tyrant to the Uyghurs
The politician who had to cancel his European trip used to be nicknamed “the Slave” (of the CCP) but is now called “Ertis” (Actor) Tuniyaz.
Wang Yi’s Visit to Italy: A Missed Opportunity
The present Italian leadership expressed the intention to walk out of the 2019 Belt and Road agreement signed by the previous government. So far, it has not happened.
The US-China Balloon Crisis: A Uyghur View
Writing in Bitter Winter last year, I prophesied—without a crystal ball—that something similar would happen. And worse incidents in the future, too.
Qu’ran Burns in Sweden: China Protests—Hypocritically
China’s protest against the burning of the Qu’ran in Stockholm is just propaganda. The CCP offends Islam daily in much worse ways in the Uyghur homeland.
After 26 Years, Uyghurs Remember the Ghulja Massacre
On February 5, 1997, a peaceful protest was transformed into a bloodbath by the Chinese police and soldiers.
The Fate of Tibet After the Inevitable: A Tibetan Opinion
What will happen in Tibet and in the Tibetan diaspora when the Dalai Lama will die?
“Socialist Spiritual Civilization”: The Great Comeback of an Old CCP Concept
A notion launched by Deng Xiaoping, promoted by Jiang Zemin, and much less emphasized in later years, is now revamped by Xi Jinping through his latest book.
The Weaponization of the CCP’s “Zero COVID” Against Tibet
Have the Chinese lockdown measures been a tool for more surveillance and control? And are the antigenic tests on Tibetans connected with organ harvesting?









