East Turkistan exiles condemn China-Turkey security pact, cite Uyghur genocide
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The East Turkistan Government-in-Exile (ETGE), based in Washington, on 18 July sharply condemned recent diplomatic engagement between China and Turkey, alleging that deepening bilateral cooperation emboldens Beijing to intensify what it describes as a 'colonial occupation' and 'genocide' against Uyghur and other Turkic peoples in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, which the ETGE refers to as East Turkistan. The condemnation followed political consultations held on 16 July between Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Miao Deyu and Turkish Deputy Foreign Minister Berris Ekinci in Beijing.
What the China-Turkey Talks Covered
According to the Chinese Foreign Ministry, the 16 July consultations saw Beijing call for deeper 'law enforcement and security' cooperation with Ankara. Turkey, for its part, reaffirmed the 'one-China principle' and pledged not to allow Turkish territory to be used against China's claimed 'sovereignty, security and territorial integrity.' The talks represent a continuation of a security-focused diplomatic track between the two countries that critics say comes at the expense of the Uyghur diaspora.
ETGE's Allegations Against Ankara
The ETGE characterised Ankara's position as a 'grotesque inversion of the truth', insisting that Xinjiang is 'an occupied country.' In a strongly worded statement, the exiled authority said: 'This is the latest chapter in a decades-long betrayal of the Uyghur, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, and other Turkic peoples suffering under China's genocide and colonial occupation of East Turkistan.'
The ETGE further alleged that 'for nearly three decades, Turkey has helped Beijing monitor, infiltrate, co-opt, criminalise, and suppress East Turkistan's national independence movement,' calling such collaboration 'not diplomacy' but 'complicity.'
ETGE Foreign Minister's Direct Appeal to Turkey
ETGE Foreign Minister Salih Hudayar recalled a prior meeting with Turkish Deputy Foreign Minister Levent Gumrukçu, during which he had urged Turkey to be 'a voice for East Turkistan' and take a stand against what he described as China's ongoing colonial occupation and genocide. 'Instead, Ankara continues deepening cooperation with a genocidal empire bent on eradicating Turkic culture, identity, and existence in East Turkistan,' Hudayar said.
The ETGE alleged that Turkey's cooperation with Beijing effectively makes Ankara a proxy for 'transnational repression,' allowing China to 'co-opt diaspora organisations, coerce East Turkistani refugees, and suppress East Turkistan's national independence movement globally.'
International Community Called to Act
The ETGE urged the international community to formally condemn what it termed Ankara's complicity, take concrete steps to end the 'ongoing genocide,' and support 'East Turkistan's decolonisation and restoration of national independence' under the principle of national self-determination. The statement comes as scrutiny over China's policies in Xinjiang — and the responses of Muslim-majority nations — continues to intensify in international human rights forums. How Turkey navigates its ties with both Beijing and Uyghur diaspora communities will remain a closely watched fault line in global diplomacy.