Uyghurs in Turkey mourn Urumqi fire fatalities
Muhammed Memetali lost his mother and four siblings in the fire.
With his father disappeared, he cannot return to China for the funeral
“I can’t describe the pain I
felt when I saw the photo,” Muhammed Memetali said. “I looked again and again.
There were my mother and siblings, lying lifelessly.”
On 25 November a fire broke out on the 15th floor of a 21-storey
apartment block in Urumqi, capital of the Xinjiang region in China’s far west.
The building was subject to tight Covid-19 measures and its gates, including
the fire exit, were locked.
Officially, ten people were killed. Among them were Memetali’s
mother and four siblings. Yet some have claimed the death toll is in fact
higher, and questions have been asked whether the strict Covid-19 measures
prevented emergency services from getting to the victims in time. Some have
also claimed that doors of the building were locked, which authorities deny.
“My mother and siblings
would have been alive if the doors were not locked,” Memetali, who is from Xinjiang’s
native Uyghur Muslim population, told Middle East Eye.
Memetali was speaking to MEE in an Istanbul suburb in a building
that houses a Uyghur organisation called the Association of East Turkestan
Scholars (East Turkestan is the name the Muslim population most often gives to
the western regions of China that encompass Xinjiang).
Outside, the Kucukcekmece district is full of Uyghur restaurants
and shops. Inside, books from the region line the wall.
Memetali was 16 when he came to Turkey in 2016. Aged 22 now, his
sister Serafat, who also lives in Istanbul, was unable to come to the interview
after seeing the photos of her mother and siblings lying dead back home in
Urumqi.
The deadly fire is believed to have been sparked by a power strip
in a bedroom on the 15th floor of the building.
“Our apartment is a few hundred metres away from a fire centre and
one kilometre away from a hospital,” Memetali said. “How is it possible that
they failed to come in time to rescue people?”
Videos shared on Chinese social media showed fire trucks arriving
after the fire had engulfed the upper floors, with roads reportedly blocked
because of China’s fiercely debated Covid-19 measures.
The mayor of Urumqi apologised and announced that an investigation
into the incident would take place.
“I am not sure whether they would be late if the residents were not
Uyghur,” Memetali said, showing his distrust of the Chinese authorities.
The plight of the Uyghurs
The north-western regions known to some as East Turkestan and their
Muslim inhabitants have been subjected to an array of human rights violations
since the Chinese captured them in 1949.
The suppression of religion, mass surveillance, forced conversions
and the banning of the Uyghur language have all been reported under the pretext
of combatting terrorism and modernising society. China has called the
accusations “groundless”.
In September, a group of UN experts who visited the region
concluded that “the extent of arbitrary and discriminatory detention of members
of Uyghur and other predominantly Muslim minorities… may constitute
international crimes, in particular crimes against humanity.”
These crimes include torture, ill-treatment, rape, violence,
arbitrary detention, experimental medical treatment, gynecological exams,
forced abortion, and oppression of religious freedom.
China hit back, maintaining that “counter-terrorism and
deradicalisation efforts in Xinjiang have been all along conducted on the track
of the rule of law”.
Yet Beijing's definition of terrorism is vague and potentially
includes causing social panic, wearing a costume or symbol advocating
terrorism, and endangering public property.
Life under surveillance
What is not up for debate is how Memetali and other Uyghurs living
in exile are experiencing all this, particularly in light of incidents like the
Urumqi fire. The 22-year-old Uyghur is in no doubt about the level of
surveillance taking place back in China.
“When I came to Turkey in
2016, I tried once to talk to my father,” he told MEE. The result was the
detention of his father and older brother. “I don’t know where they are. I
don’t know who will bury my mother and siblings in their absence. I don’t know
if my father knows that his wife died.”
Abdurresid Eminhaci, general secretary of the Turkey-based
Association of International East Turkestan NGOs, has suffered the same
experience. His father was detained in 2017 without reason.
“We just know that he was given a five-year prison sentence but we
don’t know his whereabouts,” Eminhaci told MEE.
“I am yearning to hear their
voices but I know that if I try to, I’ll be harming them,” Memetali said of his
surviving family back in Xinjiang.
“They are using our people as slaves not only in the camps but also
in other construction projects,” Eminhaci claimed.
“For instance, they raid a house and choose men to be sent to inner
cities to work on the Belt and Road project,” he said, referring to China’s
global infrastructure plan.
Eminhaci believes China’s “goal is to destroy the Turkic and Muslim
identity of Uyghurs”. Uyghur is a Turkic ethnicity, and its language is very
similar to Turkish.
The Uyghur activist reeled off a long list of repressive Chinese tactics, including not allowing people to speak Uyghur, forcing them to abandon their religion, not letting them travel without a “valid reason”, banning social media and not allowing people to go to a mosque and pray.
Life in Turkey
In Turkey, exiles from China’s far west felt that they had found
some space to vent their frustrations. The country has been a prominent
destination for Uyghurs - a Turkish law allows issuing residence permits for
people of Turkic descent.
Last week, a group of Uyghurs gathered in front of the Chinese
consulate in Istanbul.
But the police reaction was unexpectedly severe, with the chief of
police threatening those present with deportation.
Later that day, Turkey’s interior minister, Suleyman Soylu, issued
a written statement in which he apologised and said that an “investigation was
launched” into the police response. Soylu underlined the ethnic and religious
ties between Turkey and the East Turkestan region.
“Everybody considers us as a
brother here,” Memetali said.
Still, the 22-year-old implored the Turkish government to take
further action and put pressure on its Chinese counterpart.
“I don’t understand why everybody turns a blind eye to East
Turkestan while people are killed, detained, raped,” Memetali told MEE.
“Are we not humans? What is the crime that we committed? Why can’t
I talk to my father? Why can’t I even attend my mother’s funeral? Why is
everybody silent?”
Source: middleeasteye