- cross-posted to:
- china@sopuli.xyz
- humanrights@lemmy.sdf.org
- world@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- china@sopuli.xyz
- humanrights@lemmy.sdf.org
- world@lemmy.world
“The dehumanization of Palestinians and the collective punishment they endure from Israel’s war in Gaza have shattered the very fabric of their society, much like what China has inflicted upon my people,” writes exiled Uyghur human rights lawyer Rayhan Asat.
The Palestinian mother watching a bulldozer tear through her house reminds me of every Uyghur mother whose home was invaded by Chinese forces. The rubble of schools and mosques destroyed in Gaza takes me back to my homeland, where the oldest shrines have been leveled, and our teachers handed life sentences. The surveillance system China tested against the Uyghurs has been exported to the streets of occupied Hebron. As Israeli settlers flood the West Bank with the full support of Israel’s government, I’m reminded of the millions of Han people that China brought into my homeland, where they receive special privileges in an apartheid system the world has ignored for decades.
[…]
Israeli atrocities in Gaza, and the intentional blocking of humanitarian aid that has led to starvation and the spread of polio in the besieged territory, have sparked global outrage, especially among young people. However, this same level of outrage has not been directed toward China’s systematic efforts to slowly eradicate the Uyghur people in its prison camps. Some argue that the differing reactions are due to America’s direct support for Israel’s war in Gaza, but victims do not suffer less because of the identity of their perpetrator. If human rights are truly universal, then what happens in Gaza and Xinjiang should equally outrage us all.