Uyghurs in exile grapple with discussing genocide in Xinjiang with their children

The 12-year old Uyghur girl, who now lives in the U.S. state of Virginia, was about seven years old and starting to absorb a bit more knowledge when she first learned about the repression of Uyghurs in their homeland northwestern China’s Xinjiang region.

As she got older, her mother would tell her more and more about the back story, bringing it up in the normal course of conversation or if they were in the car and the girl asked a question about her grandparents still in Xinjiang.

“I felt really sad,” the girl said about when her parents starting telling her about the crackdown.

The girl, who spoke on condition of anonymity and did not want to identify her parents to avoid endangering relatives in Xinjiang, said that the pain hit home with her when schoolmates would talk about where they were from originally.

When the girl thought about her family coming from Xinjiang, other questions would arise, such as why her grandmother would never come to visit her family in the U.S.

Her voice grows weaker and begins to trail off whenever she is asked about her hometown.

“It does affect my voice,” the girl told RFA. “Sometimes if people ask me where I’m from, it’s going to be sometimes difficult because they don’t know much about us [Uyghurs], and because they think that China is like a perfect place. They don’t know about the government and everything.”

“They’re going to think you’re crazy, she added.

It’s never easy for teenagers and children to discuss tragedies in their families, nor is it easy for parents to broach such topics with their offspring.

Artwork submitted by  students in Turkey to the Ministry of National Education for an 'East Turkestan in my Dreams' competition in May 2021 as part of a bid to highlight China’s tactics of persecution in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.  'Mom, who are they? They are from the military.'
Artwork submitted by students in Turkey to the Ministry of National Education for an ‘East Turkestan in my Dreams’ competition in May 2021 as part of a bid to highlight China’s tactics of persecution in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. ‘Mom, who are they? They are from the military.’

Uyghurs, who are being persecuted as an ethnic and religious group by the Chinese government, face a common challenge of figuring out how best to talk with young people about the 21st-century atrocities occurring in China’s northwestern Xinjiang region.

Uyghur children, born and raised in the diaspora, are asking their parents why they can’t see their grandparents, why Uyghurs in Xinjiang face genocide, and why they can’t visit their homeland.

Uyghur adults living abroad, frustrated by the inability to stop the atrocities despite widespread and credible reports about right abuses those living in Xinjiang face, say they are unsure about how to discuss the genocide with their children and sometimes falter when asked why it is happening.

At least 1.8 million Uyghurs and other Turkic minorities are believed to have been held in a network of detention camps in Xinjiang since 2017, purportedly to prevent religious extremism and terrorist activities.

Beijing has said that the camps are vocational training centers. The government has denied repeated allegations from multiple sources that it has tortured people in the camps or mistreated other Muslims living in Xinjiang.

The United States and parliaments of several Western countries have declared that China’s repression and maltreatment of the Uyghurs amount to genocide and crimes against humanity.

What should they be told?

Although children’s questions may seem simple to parents, what they are actually asking is about the history of Uyghurs, Chinese politics, and how to ensure the existence of Uyghurs abroad, said Suriyye Kashgary, co-founder of Ana Care, a Uyghur language school in northern Virginia with about 100 students ranging in age from five to 15 years old.

Uyghur boys who have lost a parent in China's Xinjiang region raise their hands during a Qu'ran class in a madrasa, or religious school, in Kayseri, Turkey, Jan. 31, 2019. Credit: Reuters
Uyghur boys who have lost a parent in China’s Xinjiang region raise their hands during a Qu’ran class in a madrasa, or religious school, in Kayseri, Turkey, Jan. 31, 2019. Credit: Reuters

“They always ask questions like “Why isn’t my grandma here? Why isn’t my grandpa here? Where are my relatives? My grandpa isn’t around. My grandma isn’t around. Where are my relatives?” she said

“What I’ve been able to learn is that [many of] the children are a bit confused because some parents answer their kids’ questions, while some parents don’t speak with them in much detail at all,” she said.

While some Uyghur parents do not disclose information to their children about the genocide, others do talk about it and take them to local demonstrations against China’s repression of Uyghurs in Xinjiang.

“There are many disagreements over whether it’s OK to explain some things to the children or not,” Kashgary said. “Some people argue that we shouldn’t let [the genocide] negatively impact their psyches, that children shouldn’t be sad about these things, and that they shouldn’t live under such stress from a young age.”

At her school, Kashgary expects teachers to be comprehensive, balanced, and vigilant as they work with the children, given the teachers’ need to be well-informed on a range of topics, she told RFA.

Uyghurs in the diaspora, who are indirect victims of China’s genocide, have been demanding justice by exposing the oppression of their families to others, including to the media.

But as a collective group of genocide victims, they have not been able to fully shield their children from the emotional suffering and negative psychological influences of the ongoing atrocities targeting Uyghurs.

Zubayra Shamseden, four of whose family members were killed or tortured by the Chinese government as part of the Ghulja Massacre in 1997, and who has relatives currently being held in internment camps in Xinjiang, works as China’s outreach coordinator for the Washington-based Uyghur Human Rights Project and as a Uyghur human rights activist.

“When it comes to the Uyghur genocide, it’s a fact that it is tearing up and impacting the lives of Uyghurs on the outside in the diaspora as well,” she said. “It’s not just adults — the shadows of the Uyghur genocide are affecting children and teenagers.”

Shamseden says that Uyghurs in the diaspora are dealing with a kind of emotional genocide and that trying to hide the genocide from the children will not solve the issue.

“It is likely only those parents who are unable to accept [the genocide] psychologically or deal with it properly themselves who worry that letting their children know about it may place undue psychological pressure on them,” she said. “In fact, children can learn about [genocide] in many different ways.”

Shamseden’s children, who were born and raised outside Xinjiang, also have become activists, participating in events protesting the Chinese government’s crackdown on Uyghurs.

“Parents have a responsibility to show children the way, lead them down [the right] paths, take them to proper activities,” she said.

Qurbanjan Nourmuhammed looks on as his children play a game on a mobile phone at their home in Istanbul, Turkey, Dec. 12, 2018. Credit: Reuters
Qurbanjan Nourmuhammed looks on as his children play a game on a mobile phone at their home in Istanbul, Turkey, Dec. 12, 2018. Credit: Reuters

Part of their identity

Kashgary, who has been a Uyghur language instructor for nine years, believes that understanding the widespread atrocities and genocide is an important part of Uyghur children learning about their identity and the world.

It is important for Uyghur children to learn about their history, culture, and the current situation in Xinjiang so they can understand the challenges facing their families and the ethnic group as a whole, she said.

Kashgary said she takes extra care to ensure that classroom instructors avoid encouraging racism or hatred when discussing difficult and sensitive topics like genocide and to provide students with scholarly, fact-based materials.

Uyghur language schools around the world all face the obstacle of how to educate children about the genocide with a lack of standardized materials and appropriate manuals for the student’s psychological well-being.

Teaching Uyghur children about genocide is a difficult task for educators and parents alike.

Nevertheless, it is important to raise Uyghur children in the diaspora so that they know about the genocide facing Uyghurs, they are taught to support Uyghur activism, and work in support of human, social, and political rights, Shamseden said.

Testimonies by Uyghurs who have been detained in internment camps but later freed have been particularly influential in the global response to the crisis.

Camp survivors have real-life experience in understanding the psychological impact of the genocide and its effect on victims’ families, including children.

Gulbahar Haitiwaji, who was detained in one of the camps but now lives in Paris, said she has never hidden the brutal, abusive treatment she experiences from her daughters and that she takes every opportunity she can to tell her story.

“The Chinese [authorities] told me I couldn’t speak about anything, that if I said anything my relatives in the homeland would end up threatened and in danger, that I needed to think about the people who were going to stay behind in the homeland,” Haitiwaji said.

But Haitiwaji noted the importance of speaking about the horrors of the camps as China wages a disinformation campaign to whitewash and justify the genocide, and said that Uyghur parents must protect their children from the propaganda by telling them the truth.

Artwork submitted by students in Turkey to the Ministry of National Education for an 'East Turkestan in my Dreams' competition in May 2021 as part of a bid to highlight China’s tactics of persecution in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. 'A Uyghur boy whose family was abducted by authorities in Xinjiang.'
Artwork submitted by students in Turkey to the Ministry of National Education for an ‘East Turkestan in my Dreams’ competition in May 2021 as part of a bid to highlight China’s tactics of persecution in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. ‘A Uyghur boy whose family was abducted by authorities in Xinjiang.’

“Even now — more than two years since I came here — whenever we’re eating or drinking tea, if some words or movements come up that remind me of the camp, I immediately, at the right moment, tell the story,” she said. “I talk about the situation. I haven’t hidden anything.”

“Look at the slanderous things the Chinese government is writing about us,” she said. “Of course, if I don’t explain things to my kids, I wonder whether they’re going to believe the slander.”

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespeople have dismissed reports about the genocide of the Uyghurs as the “lie of the century” and denied all accusations of human rights abuses in Xinjiang.

All Uyghur parents must tell their children about the genocide and rights abuses occurring in Xinjiang, Haitiwaji said.

“If we don’t tell them, they’re going to know nothing about the oppression our people are facing,” she said. “They might even come to believe the brainwashing lies of the Chinese government.”

Upstanders, not bystanders

Psychologist Nechama Liss-Levenson, who has a private practice in Washington, D.C., has published numerous scholarly articles on family relationships and how children deal with trauma and loss.

She recently began taking part in the Uyghur Wellness Initiative, a collaborative program sponsored by groups including the Uyghur Human Rights Project and Uyghur American Association, to treat and prevent the effects of genocide on the mental health of diaspora Uyghurs.

“The Uyghur genocide affects every Uyghur,” she said. “We all know it’s not easy to teach kids about genocide and other terrible tragedies.”

Artwork submitted by students in Turkey to the Ministry of National Education for an 'East Turkestan in my Dreams' competition in May 2021 as part of a bid to highlight China’s tactics of persecution in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. 'You are forbidden to read the Qur'an. You will be imprisoned.'
Artwork submitted by students in Turkey to the Ministry of National Education for an ‘East Turkestan in my Dreams’ competition in May 2021 as part of a bid to highlight China’s tactics of persecution in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. ‘You are forbidden to read the Qur’an. You will be imprisoned.’

Such discussions cannot be one-time events, but rather part of ongoing conversations along with teaching children about what they can do so they do not feel powerless, she said.

“One thing that I think is important is to teach children about resilience and activism — without using these words — so that they don’t feel completely helpless,” Liss-Levinson said. “One of the things that you might teach them — not all at once but over many conversations at different ages and stages — is that in their lives here at school, they should be upstanders and not bystanders.”

Thomas Wenzel, an associate professor of psychiatry at the Medical University of Vienna in Austria who has conducted research on the effect of the Uyghur genocide in exile communities, said Uyghur parents in the diaspora struggle to deal with the genocide as well, wondering what has become of relatives in Xinjiang and despairing over shortcomings in efforts by the international community that have not yet ended the repression.

“When parents are distressed, it is more difficult for them to focus on the children. … The children feel it, and they feel abandoned,” he said.

Wenzel suggests that Uyghur diaspora communities collectively tackle the issue.

“It’s important that it’s a community process,” he said. “From psychology and psychiatry, we know now that if something very bad like genocide or war happens, it’s very important that the community starts the process to confront integrate what has happened, that there is a community project.”

Wenzel cited the example of communities in Myanmar where traditional storytellers with hand puppets acted out negative events, followed by group discussions.

“They brought it out into the open, and there was a space to work on it,” he said. “It’s important that this is by the whole community so that everyone is supporting each other, and no one is left alone.”

Translated by RFA’s Uyghur Service. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin.

Vietnamese Economy Rosy In Q1, Still Faces Bumpy Road Ahead

Vietnam’s production and business recovered in the first quarter of this year, but are still encountering many obstacles, including adverse impacts of the global pandemic and the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict, said local and international organisations.

According to Vietnam’s General Statistics Office (GSO), under the Ministry of Planning and Investment, the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew 5.03 percent in the first quarter of this year, compared with 4.72 percent in the same period last year, and 3.66 percent in the first quarter of 2020 creating a springboard for economic growth in the next quarters of 2022.

“Vietnam’s economy gradually recovered with production and business activities being speeded up in the first quarter of this year. The country will post higher GDP growth in the second quarter because of its comprehensive reopening and better containment of COVID-19,” local economist, Dinh Trong Thinh, a veteran lecturer of the Academy of Finance, said.

According to him, the highlight of Vietnam’s economic growth in the first quarter of 2022, when global supply chain began to resume and regain momentum, was the remarkable acceleration of a “three-horse carriage,” namely investment, export and consumption.

Between Jan and Mar, the realised social investment capital at current prices stood at 562.2 trillion Vietnamese dong (24.4 billion U.S. dollars), posting a year-on-year rise of 8.9 percent.

In the three-month period, the realised foreign direct investment capital increased by 7.8 percent to over 4.4 billion U.S. dollars, the first-quarter biggest amount, over the past five years. Meanwhile, Vietnam welcomed nearly 91,000 visitors, up 89.1 percent from the same period last year, after it reopened the tourism market, resuming many international air routes.

Regarding export, the country earned nearly 88.6 billion U.S. dollars from shipping goods, including 15 items with each export turnover of over one billion U.S. dollars, in the first quarter of this year, surging 12.9 percent. It gained a trade surplus of 809 million U.S. dollars.

Meanwhile, total retail sales of consumer goods and services stood at 1,318 trillion Vietnamese dong, up 4.4 percent year on year.

However, the economist expressed his worry about a potential high inflation rate. “I am afraid that the consumer price index (CPI) this year may double against last year,” he said, noting that, CPI increased 1.84 percent in 2021, and grew 1.92 percent in the first quarter of 2022, when many countries in the world faced the biggest price hike in several decades.

To realise the economic growth target, Vietnam will centre on taking seven groups of measures, including effectively curbing the COVID-19 pandemic, while assisting enterprises in recovering and developing in the 2022-2023 period; controlling prices of essential goods and services and ensuring their supplies; boosting domestic production, including electricity generation; fostering the local market, as well as, export in a sustainable way; quickly recovering the tourism market; accelerating administrative reform; and actively dealing with natural disasters, she said.

On Apr 5, the World Bank lowered its forecast for Vietnam’s GDP growth this year to 5.3 percent, down from the projection of 6.5 percent it made last Oct.

Over 78 percent of the Vietnamese population is fully vaccinated, but the economy still faces serious downside risks, from possible new variants, the global ripple effects of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, rising commodity prices and economic slowdown, in its major export markets, said the bank.

On Apr 6, the Asian Development Bank predicted Vietnam’s economy would expand 6.5 percent this year, when developing economies in Asia are set to grow 5.2 percent amid global uncertainty. (1 U.S. dollar equals 22,862 Vietnamese dong)

Source: NAM News Network

Covid-19: Vaccine supply outstrips demand, access inequity remains

After two years of racing to vaccinate the world against Covid-19, the number of available doses now surpasses demand in many areas.

Yet a gap remains in vaccination rates between the richest and poorest countries.

On Friday, Gavi, which co-leads the Covax global distribution scheme, is holding a summit calling for more funds to address the issue of inequality in vaccine access.

More than 13 billion doses have been produced since the pandemic, 11 billion of which have been administered, according to the International Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Associations (IFPMA).

Science research group Airfinity expect nine billion more doses to be produced this year. Pfizer alone plans to make four billion doses.

Yet demand could fall to six billion doses this year, IFPMA’s director general Thomas Cueni said.

“Since mid-2021, global vaccine production has exceeded global vaccine demand and this gap has continuously risen,” Cueni said.

By next year, production could exceed demand by 1.3 to 3.1 billion doses, he added.

Many richer nations are now approaching oversupply. European Union and G7 countries had a surplus of 497 million doses at the end of last month.

There are fears that doses could go to waste. Covid vaccines have a relatively short shelf-life — AstraZeneca and Novavax’s jabs have a six-month expiry date.

Airfinity says 241 million doses have passed their sell-by date so far during the pandemic.

Nevertheless, billions of people remain unvaccinated around the world, most of them in developing nations.

Covax, an international public-private partnership co-led by WHO and Gavi, has delivered 1.4 billion doses to 145 countries — far short of the planned two billion doses by end-2021.

World Health Organisation chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has warned that inequality in vaccine access could lead to the emergence of new, possibly more contagious variants.

The WHO wants 70 percent of every country’s population vaccinated by July.

But records are uneven.

Nearly 80 percent of France’s population, for example, has received two doses. But only 15 percent of the population on the continent of Africa is fully vaccinated, according to Oxford University data.

An average of 42 percent of the population of 92 low- and middle-income countries participating in Covax have had two doses.

“Vaccine inequity is the biggest moral failure of our times and people and countries are paying the price,” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said earlier this year.

Covax says it now has enough doses to vaccinate around 45 percent of the population in the 92 countries receiving donations. But 25 of those countries lack the infrastructure for an effective immunisation campaign.

Making matters worse, many developing countries are being donated doses too close to their expiry date.

UNICEF’s supply division director Etleva Kadilli said that in December almost more than 100 million doses had been refused, “the majority due to product shelf life”.

Gavi has ruled that doses must be valid for at least 10 weeks on arriving in countries.

Countries like South Africa and India have long called for the World Trade Organisation to suspend intellectual property rights for vaccines and anti-Covid treatments, so they can massively boost production.

After fierce opposition from pharmaceutical giants, a first compromise was reached between the United States, European Union, India and South Africa last month.

But several key countries like Switzerland have yet to sign on. Doctors Without Borders also says there are “key limitations” in the deal, such as covering only vaccines and geographical limits.

Pharmaceutical companies argue that patents are not the real problem.

Cueni of IFPMA, a big pharma lobby group, said the problem was now logistics.

“What we need is money to have storage, transportation, more trained health workers, campaigns to counter misinformation: these are the real challenges and not the patent waiver,” he said.

Current vaccines target the virus that swept the world in 2020. While they greatly reduce the risk of serious illness from Covid, they only provide partial protection — particularly against newer variants such as the now dominant Omicron.

Several vaccine manufacturers have begun testing jabs that target Omicron. They have hit delays but could be available in a few months, if approved by health authorities.

And despite the billions yet to receive a first dose, the United States, Britain, France and Israel have started rolling out a fourth, starting with the most vulnerable.

On Wednesday, the EU’s medicines watchdog approved a second booster for people aged 80 years and over.

“No country can boost its way out of the pandemic,” Tedros has warned.

Source: NAM News Network

Vietnam Reports 34,140 New COVID-19 Cases

Vietnam logged 34,140 new COVID-19 cases yesterday, down 5,194 cases from Friday, according to the Ministry of Health.

The new infections, logged in 63 localities nationwide, included 34,138 domestically transmitted and two imported.

Localities reporting the highest number of COVID-19 infections in the past 24 hours included the Vietnamese capital, Hanoi with 2,202 new cases, the northern Bac Giang province with 1,956, and the central Nghe An province with 1,656.

The infections brought the total tally in Vietnam to 10,169,929, with 42,794 deaths. Nationwide, 8,497,532 COVID-19 patients, or 84 percent of the infections, have so far recovered.

Nearly 208.5 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines have been administered in the country, including 191.2 million shots on people aged 18 and above, said the ministry.

Source: NAM News Network

Indonesia Braces For Higher Inflation, Slowdown In Economic Recovery

The Indonesian government said, the country is preparing to face a spike in inflation in the coming months, caused by high global commodity prices, which may lead to a slowdown in the post-pandemic economic recovery.

Finance Minister, Sri Mulyani Indrawati, said at the ASEAN (the Association of Southeast Asian Nations) Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors Meeting (AFMGM), the surge in the global commodity prices was believed to happen as the spillover effect of the Ukraine crisis.

“This is a serious challenge for all policy makers, maybe not only in Indonesia, but all ASEAN countries,” the minister said.

Indonesia’s Consumer Price Index in Mar, rose by 2.64 percent year-on-year, the highest increase since Apr, 2020, according to the country’s Statistics Indonesia (BPS).

The Indonesian people have seen a surge in cooking oil prices up to six percent in the domestic market, since the government removed the price cap on cooking oil in Feb, following an increase in international crude palm oil (CPO) prices.

Indonesia, the world’s largest palm oil producer, experienced the impact of the high prices of global CPO last month, amid the supply bottleneck of sunflower oil, due to the Ukraine crisis, BPS head, Margo Yuwono, said.

Indonesia’s state-owned oil and gas company, Pertamina, also raised the price of its high-octane gasoline product, named Pertamax, by 40 percent starting Friday.

Indonesia’s Coordinating Minister for Maritime and Investment Affairs, Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan, said, the government might soon raise the price of the three-kilogram liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) canisters, the most popular brand used by the people in the country.

Economic and energy observer, Fahmy Radhi from Gadjah Mada University, warned the government that, the plan to raise the LPG price could create panic buying from the public.

President Joko Widodo told his ministers to monitor the soaring domestic prices and to convey the policy changes more clearly to the public, including any plans related to raising prices of other commodities.

Deputy Governor of Bank Indonesia, Dody Budi Waluyo, was confident that until the end of the year, inflation will remain between two and four percent.

Economic expert, Yusuf Rendy, from the Jakarta-based think tank Centre of Reform on Economics (Core), said that, higher prices and inflation would burden the middle-lower class of people and weaken their purchasing power.

“For the middle-upper class, inflation may not bring significant impact, but the middle-lower class would suffer, given their economic situations haven’t yet fully recovered,” Rendy noted.

He suggested that the government distribute more aid to the people and take more subsidy policies, to support the purchasing power of the middle-lower class.

Source: NAM News Network

Thieves Steal 60-Foot Bridge In India’s Bihar

Scrap metal thieves, in the eastern Indian state of Bihar, stole an abandoned 60-foot steel bridge, officials said yesterday.

The bridge, reportedly weighing 500 tonnes, was stolen from Amiyawar village, in Rohtas district, about 119 km south-west of Patna, the capital city of Bihar.

According to locals, heavy machines and gas cutters were used to chip off the steel frame of the bridge. Following the dismantling of the structure, the scrap was loaded onto vehicles.

Arshad Kamal Shamshi, a junior engineer with the local irrigation department, told the media that, the thieves were pretending as mechanical department officials, as villagers reported.

According to Shamshi, his department has filed a case with the police over the theft.

Reports said the dilapidated bridge was built on the Ara Canal in 1972, and villagers had stopped using it after a parallel concrete bridge was thrown open five years ago.

Source: NAM News Network