China forced migration of Uighur Muslims from Xinjiang, says report – Times of India

Beijing: China is forcing an exodus Uighurs from your homeland xinjiang In other parts of the country, according to a new report that details the minority community’s poor record of human rights status, has prompted condemnation from the international community.
According to the think tank Policy Research Group, a new investigation into the migration phenomenon has found that the displacement of Uighurs has been achieved with the help of a job placement company.
cited a report by radio free asia ,RFA), the think tank said that a Chinese job placement company put out an advertisement which claimed that more than two thousand Uighur workers were available to work on contract for two years.
The RFA report said the ad claimed that all workers had professional degrees and were good Mandarin speakers.
More than 3000 workers from Kashgar in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous regions, according to the RFA, were placed across the country. The think tank said this latest development continues with China’s ongoing conflicts with minority populations.
Earlier this month, fresh evidence against China showing surveillance, intimidation and harassment of Uighurs in concentration camps in Xinjiang has emerged.
A 20 minute video shot by a man named ‘Chashma’guanguan‘, who traveled to China’s far western region in 2019 but went back in 2020 after reading an article by US news outlet BuzzFeed that indicated the locations of some of the camps there, the RFA reported.
“Due to Chinese government restrictions, foreign journalists hardly have access to Xinjiang for interviews,” he said in the video.
China has been rebuked globally by sending Uighur Muslims to mass detention camps, interfering with their religious activities, and sending community members to undergo any form of forced re-education or education.
Earlier this year, the United States became the first country in the world to declare Chinese actions in Xinjiang a “genocide.” In February, both the Canadian and Dutch parliaments adopted resolutions recognizing the Uighur crisis as genocide.
The latter became the first parliament in Europe to do so. In April, the United Kingdom also declared China’s ongoing crackdown in Xinjiang a “genocide”.

,