China refutes Turkish FM's accusation on Xinjiang training centers
Global Times
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Children of trainees attend class at a primary school affiliated to Hotan's education and training center. (Photo: Global Times)


The Chinese Embassy in Turkey refuted claims made by Turkey's foreign ministry regarding the alleged death of a Uyghur musician, claiming the man is still alive and in good health. 

The embassy also strongly opposed accusations from Turkey on Xinjiang's vocational education and training centers, saying the accusations are "contrary to the facts" and were made up "out of thin air."

In a statement Saturday, the Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman, Hami Aksoy, alleged that Uyghur poet and musician Abdurehim Heyit had died in custody. He also called the vocational training centers "great shame for humanity."

A spokesperson from the Chinese Embassy in Turkey said in a statement on Sunday that Heyit, 57, who had been an actor with the Xinjiang Art Theater Song and Dance Troupe, is still alive and in good health. The embassy said Heyit was arrested according to the law on suspicion of endangering national security.

The Chinese government maintains basic rights of people of all ethnic groups in Xinjiang, the spokesperson said. 

"What needs to be emphasized is that the right to life is the basic human right, and terrorism and extremism severely threaten that right, and the safety of all people in Xinjiang," the embassy spokesperson said. 

The spokesperson, who was not named in the two statements released on the embassy's website on Sunday, also said that "both China and Turkey are faced with grave counter-terrorism situations. We oppose double standards on counter-terrorism and hope Turkey correctly learns and understands the counter-terrorism and de-extremism measures that China have taken." 

The Chinese embassy has asked the Turkish foreign ministry to withdraw its false accusations and take measures to eliminate their bad influence.

The vocational education and training centers are not "concentration camps," as the Turkish side alleges and their core objective is to counter terrorism and extremism, the spokesperson said. 

The establishment of the vocational education and training centers unite, educate and save the vast majority of people who commit illegal or minor crimes from becoming victims of terrorism and extremism, the statement reads.

The embassy's statement maintains that the centers are open to the public and China has invited envoys and journalists from 12 countries including Turkey to visit them. 

"The journalists who were invited to Xinjiang wrote objective reports but the reports were ignored by some people. All I can say is they are with prejudice or have other motives," the Chinese spokesperson said. 

The Turkish Foreign Ministry's accusations that the centers are "concentration camps," "planned systematic assimilation of Uyghur people," "severely violate human rights," and don't allow "contact with relatives" come out of thin air, the Chinese spokesperson's statement said.

Since the establishment of the education and training centers, there have been no violent terrorist incidents in Xinjiang for more than 25 months, and security situation has greatly improved, the embassy noted.  

In 2017, Xinjiang received more than 100 million domestic and foreign tourists, up 32 percent. The number of tourists in 2018 exceeded 150 million, an increase of 50 percent. These figures fully demonstrate that Xinjiang is safe and stable.