A Kazak journalist from Xinjiang was exposed in a prison camp for family visits

In Turkey, A woman named Gulaixia holds a sign to protest against the communist government’s detention of her brother, Dili, and two sisters

The Chinese communist Party continues to draw attention to its practice of forcibly detaining ethnic minorities in Xinjiang. A Kazakh journalist in Yili, Xinjiang province, has been detained in a “re-education camp” for three years along with his two sisters, family members said recently. Delishati is in poor health and in urgent need of medical treatment. Another Kazakh woman complained to Taiwan that her husband had been banned from leaving the country after his release.

Throughout the summer with my daughter now living in Turkey said, would they get the message from xinjiang ili hometown recently, her elder brother’s son and two younger sisters detained in xinjiang has been three years, “the news a few months ago, several people, my uncle (reporter xia di force) can video once every month, two of my aunt (throughout the summer’s sister) and two of them met her husband. The little aunt had seen her husband once before, but the period had never seen him. We had been told that the two aunts were being held in different cities, and now they said they were being held in the same place. They didn’t say much when they met, they just cried.”

Delixatti (left) and his two sisters are detained by the Communist government

The elder brother of Gulesha Wulaibai was Delxiati Wulaibai, a famous Journalist, writer, literary translator, and editor-in-chief of literary journals of the Hasak nationality. He has worked as a journalist, translator and editor-in-chief of Yili Daily, Yili Political Association and Kuitun Daily. Over the past two decades, Delizati has translated 15 literary books, including Captain Grant’s Daughter, more than 30 short stories, including Freedom, and three TV series with more than 150 episodes, such as Shenzhou. More than a dozen of his articles have been awarded certificates by the Xinjiang Autonomous Region government.

Gu said her brother, who is being held in a prison-like building in Yining county, Xinjiang province, is in poor health and needs proper medical treatment. (Translated by her daughter) : “He is in very poor health and people he meets say he is extremely thin. And my mother’s niece, who is studying in Kazakhstan, has been receiving constant threats from the xinjiang police. There were five or six cops on WeChat saying, send in your id card, copy of your passport.”

Some of the freed Xinjiang natives remain under house arrest for long periods

In recent years, an increasing number of overseas Kazakhs have complained to us that their relatives and friends in China’s Xinjiang province have been detained by the authorities, hoping to draw international attention. Aletna, a resident of Ili, Xinjiang province, living in Kazakhstan. Altnay Tursun, speaking in Kazakh, told the station of her husband, Yerbalati. Husman, who lives in Ahudik Village, Abittan Town, Altay City, Xinjiang Province, China, was detained by public security on October 27, 2017 to an “education center”. He was released a year later: “Until now, husman has been imprisoned at home without any freedom or rights. I came to Kazakhstan in 2019, but the Chinese government banned my husband from traveling there. At present, I have no financial resources and I am in poor health. I am appealing for help from western countries and international human rights organizations so that I can be reunited with my husband at an early date.”

During her stay in Xinjiang, She said, she was injected with unknown fluids and forced to take unknown drugs, and threatened that “if you tell this, your husband will die.” At present, Allatt is severely hair loss, blurred vision in the right eye nearly blind.

Yerbalati poses with his wife, Aletna. (Provided by the parties)

Since early 2017, xinjiang authorities have been building and renovating so-called “education and training centers” to send millions of Ethnic Uighurs and Kazakhs to education camps.

Ilsen, a young Kazakh man who fled Xinjiang for political asylum in Ukraine, told the BBC that “re-education centres” varied across Xinjiang, but the level of cruelty to detainees was roughly the same. “The cruelest thing is that the ‘education center’ in Osaka city, 90 kilometers from Urumqi, is huge,” he said. The human rights of the ‘trainees’ of the education center in Taecheng Ermin County were seriously violated; In the Education center in Zhaosu County, Yili Kazakh Autonomous prefecture, the police and army are guarding the evil, and one cadet is beaten to death like a feather. The Turkic minority living in Xinjiang cannot escape the fate of ‘learning’ in the re-education center.

Ilsen has been declared a political refugee by a Ukrainian court and is now waiting to travel to a third country.