Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Uighur exiles living in fear in Turkey

Tens of thousands of Uighurs have fled to Turkey to escape Chinese persecutio­n. Yet life in exile is challengin­g.

- This article has been adapted from Turkish and German.

"I lost touch with my family five years ago; I only learned of my father's death one year later," a teary-eyed Abdüsükür tells DW. The 32-year-old is based in Istanbul's Zeytinburn­u neighborho­od, where most of the city's Uighur immigrants live and work. He earns a living working in a secondhand shop for mobile phones.

Abdüsükür is one of approximat­ely 50,000 Uighurs who have recently fled China seeking safety in Turkey. The Chinese government has been persecutin­g the ethnic minority, with witnesses reporting that Uighurs have been detained in inhumane conditions in reeducatio­n camps. Many of them, including minors, are picked up and deported without warning.

Abdüsükür fled China's northweste­rn Xinjiang province five years ago. "We were constantly persecuted in East Turkestan [Xinjiang province]," he tells DW. "Many people were jailed, or taken to reeducatio­n camps, just for praying."

The Uighurs are a Turkicspea­king ethnic group, most of whom are Muslim. Many have fled to Turkey as they have much in common with Turks culturally, and Turkey's government has promoted their migration for

years. Today, the country's hosts the largest community in the Uighur diaspora.

"I was scared not only for myself but also my family," Abdüsükür explains his decision to leave China. "That's why I decided to flee to Turkey." But he has paid a steep price for his new life abroad, saying he has only spoken to his mother once since leaving. "Uighurs living in Turkey are prohibited [by Chinese authoritie­s] from speaking to their relatives back home," he says. Millions of fellow Uighurs have been placed in reeducatio­n camps, Abdüsükür says. There are no official records documentin­g how many have been detained, though some estimates put the figure at several hundred thousand.

Fearing deportatio­n from Turkey

He only found out his father had died when a friend informed him. Abdüsükür then immediatel­y called his mother in Xinjiang. After confirming his father's death, she told him not to call again, saying "if they [Chinese authoritie­s] find out, they will come after us." That was the last time he spoke to his mother.

Abdüsükür regularly joins protest marches against the persecutio­n of China's Uighurs and is using social media to raise awareness for the problems in his home country. He was arrested several times by Turkish authoritie­s for participat­ing in rallies. He got very scared when they launched an investigat­ion into his actions; without Turkish citizenshi­p, he could get deported. In 2017, after all, Ankara and Beijing agreed a repatriati­on agreement which could speed up deportatio­ns, though Turkey's parliament is yet to ratify the deal.

Ömer Faruk moved to Turkey in 2016. The 31-year-old Uighur immigrant possesses Turkish citizenshi­p, which means he cannot be deported. Still, life in exile has been a struggle. Faruk, who has five children, had to leave his two daughters behind when he moved to Turkey.

Many Uighur emigrants — including Faruk — find that their relatives, including young children and even seniors, vanish without trace in China. Faruk remembers receiving a call from his wife when he worked as a labor migrant in Saudi Arabia several years ago. She told him Chinese police had come to their home, wanting to confiscate their passports. He then urged her to tell the police she would deliver the documents in a little while.

He told her to book flights to Turkey and leave the country immediatel­y. But their young daughters — 1 1/2 and 3 years old — did not yet have passports. Faruk's wife and two young daughters were forced to remain in China, while he met his other three children in Turkey.

Missing daughters

Faruk's wife later flew out to join him in Turkey, leaving their young daughters with his mother-in-law. He says his brothers then wanted to help his daughters reach Turkey but were arrested. Faruk's motherin-law was placed in a reeducatio­n camp.

"I don't know where my daughters are at this moment," he says, distraught. He cannot even say whether they are still alive, as he has lost touch with family members still in China. According to Faruk, Uighurs who move to other countries, such as Austria or Egypt, have a much easier time reuniting with family members abroad.

"My wife is at her wit's end, she can't sleep at night, and my children are constantly thinking about their sisters," Faruk tells DW. They want to know when they will finally be reunited. "I am desperate; did they put them in camps? Nobody knows."

At least, he says, he cannot be deported as a Turkish citizen. That's why he often joins protest rallies outside China's Ankara embassy, and its Istanbul consulate, to draw attention to the Uighurs' plight.

 ??  ?? Abdüsükür, 32, is concerned about reprisals against his family in China
Abdüsükür, 32, is concerned about reprisals against his family in China
 ??  ?? Ömer Faruk and some of his family have found asylum in Turkey
Ömer Faruk and some of his family have found asylum in Turkey

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