Dozens of Uighurs fled from the hell of China to the hell of Thai prisons

Dozens of Uighurs fled from the hell of China to the hell of Thai prisons

More than 50 Uighurs remain detained in Thai detention facilities nearly ten years after leaving China, and they constantly worry about being sent back because China is alleged to have committed serious human rights crimes.
Details of abuses, like as torture, forced labour, and “wide-ranging” arbitrary detention in what Beijing refers to as vocational training centres, were disclosed in a UN report published in August.
He told AFP, “The situation is horrible.”

“They always worry that they will face persecution in China if they are sent back.”
The Thai government, which has forgotten about the Uighur, fears “hell on the ground” in 2015, therefore this is not a normal fear.
More than 50 Uighurs are still being held in Thai detention facilities nearly ten years after they fled China, and their detainers live in constant fear of having to send them back.

The leader of the Human Rights Association, Khalda Tajarnsk, asserted, “It is obvious that the Uighur is regarded a specific security issue.”
Earlier, the director of Human Rights Watch in Geneva, John Fischer, considered that the report of the United Nations Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, provides sufficient evidence for China to commit crimes that exceed war crimes, against Uighur in the region of Shigniang.

The report includes “a criticism of Chinese human rights crimes against Uighurs and other Muslims in the Xinjiang area of China,” the Human Rights Director stated.
Michelle Bachelet, a former UN representative, “explained how these infractions may rise to the level of crimes against humanity, which are more serious international crimes,” the speaker said.
To learn more about the minority Uighur oppression:

Numerous Uighurs escaped from China’s horrors to Thailand’s hellish prisons.

About Author

World