Recent cases highlight the danger of forced repatriation that Uyghur refugees face in Thailand and Pakistan, casting a disturbing shadow over Muslim states’ connivance with the CCP crimes.
Muslim Uyghurs
Empowering the Next Generation of Uyghurs to Challenge China’s Genocide
Campaign for Uyghurs hosted a Uyghur Advocacy Training Workshop for young activists in Istanbul. Bitter Winter was there.
More Uyghur Criticism of Donnie Yen: Wasn’t He More Guilty than Will Smith?
Will Smith slapped Chris Rock and was banned from the Oscars for ten years. Donnie Yen slapped the Hongkongers and the Uyghurs. He was not banned.
The Donnie Yen Fiasco: A Uyghur View
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.
Abduxaliq Uyghur, 1901–1933: Uyghurs Remember Their Beheaded Poet
An author who tried to create a national Uyghur conscience through poetry and education was executed by a Chinese warlord ninety years ago,
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.
“Today I Received Uyghur Girls”: Uyghur Teenagers as Victims of Human Trafficking
“Labor transfer agents” in Mainland China boast on social media that new shipments of Uyghur young women have arrived, as if they were just another commercial good.
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.
Poetry Against Mass Atrocities: Poets Compare Notes on Jewish, Uyghur, and Other Genocides
Holocaust Memorial Week stirred flames of remembrance in the pens of exiled poets, displaced through their religion or politics.
Abliz Abdulhek, Uyghur Author of “Independence or Death,” Has Passed Away
Regarded as a hard-line independence activist, Abliz Abdulhek was respected by many as a strong voice against oppression and genocide.









