March 10 commemorates the events of 1959. The CCP policy against minority ethnic and religious groups has unfortunately not changed.
China
A Sad Women’s Day for Mothers, Sisters, Wives of Xinjiang Camps Inmates
In desperation, they demonstrated before the Chinese consulates in Almaty, Kazakhstan and Istanbul, Turkey. Each had a story of persecution and abuse.
CCP’s Vendetta: Descendants of Ospan Batyr Detained in Xinjiang
The “Kazakh Robin Hood” fought against the CCP and was executed in 1951. Now, the CCP is identifying and arresting his family members.
Uyghur Forced Labor, Coercion on an Industrial Scale Exposed
New documents prove that hundreds of thousands of Uyghurs and other Turkic workers are forcibly transferred to other provinces to tear apart their communities.
Keeping the Uyghur Culture Alive in Exile
Non-Chinese culture is repressed or reduced to a tourist attraction in Xinjiang. But exile and sorrow have produced a flurry of poetry and creativity among the diaspora.
Heavier Sentences for Church of Almighty God Members
As part of the campaign aimed at eradicating the movement, jail terms have been substantially increased.
“Poverty Has Been Eliminated in China”—Only, It Is Not True
Triumphal ceremonies hailed Xi Jinping’s victory in the “war on poverty.” But data are either false or misinterpreted.
The Netherlands Too Call It A Genocide
It is the first such decision in Europe. Other similar motions are on their way. It can become a wave, and governments may decide to follow up and act.
China’s Secret Weapon: Changing the Meaning of “Human Rights”
For the first time in history, a Chinese Foreign Minister addressed the UN Human Rights Council. His speech was a textbook example of Orwellian “newspeak.”
Women Routinely Raped in Tibetan Reeducation Camps Too
Just like Muslim women in Xinjiang, lay Buddhist girls and nuns are also submitted to systematic rape in Tibet’s transformation through education camps.









