1. She had 11 children, which confirms that Uighurs were not subject to
China's One Child Policy.
2. She was born to a family with no background. She started her business
with a road side convenience store and worked her way to be THE richest
person in the province of Xinjiang. This proved Uighur can earn their
business success through hard work.
3. She was a senior member of the People's Congress of Xinjiang, and a senior
member of the National People's Congress of China. This shows Uighur were
not excluded from political life in China.
4. She was arrested because she provided funding to Eastern Turkestan and
carried out activities in China following instructions from Eastern
Turkestan. Eastern Turkestan is labeled as terrorist organization by most
countries including the US, Russia, China, etc.
Thursday, July 9, 2009
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
New York Times no better at getting facts straight
http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2009/07/06/world/20090706-CHINA_5.html
New York Times picture with description 'Uighurs injured at a hospital in the city during a media tour by the authorities on Monday.' However, this patient has a typical Han Chinese face, and his surname (from the name tag on the wall, 'YongHe Liu, Bed 32') is one of the most popular surnames of Han Chinese (as Lucy Liu).
Yet another false evidence used by Uighur separatist

A Uighur separatist, holding the blue 'Flag of the East Turkestan Republic (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Turkestan_independence_movement)' uses this photo as evidence of Chinese crackdown of the 'peaceful' protest by the Uighur. This picture, however, was taken on May 16, 2009 in Hangzhou City in southeast China, and is about a family of three, riding a motorcycle, involved in a tragic accident. (http://news.qq.com/a/20090516/000223.htm)
Exiled Uigher Leader uses false picture as evidence

Exiled Uighur leader, Rebiya, holds this picture as evidence of the Chinese government crackdown on the 'peaceful' protest by the Uighur dissidents. The picture, however, was taken last month in Hubei province in South China. The characters on the bottom of the picture clearly reads 'Jun 21, Yonglong Grand Hotel. Over 40,000 people are leaving the scene, and security forces are enforcing orders.

Click picture to enlarge
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