Skip to content
cetni-home-logo-320

Centre for East Turkistan National Interest

  • English
  • ئۇيغۇرچە
  • Primary Menu
    • HOME
    • About CETNI
      • Our Advisors
      • Leadership
      • Contact Us
    • News
      • Event
    • Articles
    • Podcast
    • Interview
    • Truth vs Fiction
    • Donate
    • Home
    • Reports
    • Genocide and Uyghur Resilience: Uniqueness, Current Struggles, and Future Ahead
    • Reports

    Genocide and Uyghur Resilience: Uniqueness, Current Struggles, and Future Ahead

    CETNI 2 months ago (Last updated: 1 month ago) 2 minutes read 0 comments
    Report 2025

    Report 2025

    View Full Report ( November 12, 2025 ) Printable Version

    Summary of Key Developments

    • Since the invasion by the People’s Republic of China (PRC) in 1949, Beijing has systematically intensified total control of East Turkistan by utilizing settler colonialism.
    • The intensification of oppression, most notably the genocide and crimes against humanity perpetrated in East Turkistan since 2017, has strengthened demands for freedom and independence within the Uyghur diaspora. In contrast, groups that abandoned aspirations for independence and restricted their efforts to a human-rights framework have gradually experienced a decline in credibility among diaspora communities.
    • International attention towards China’s genocide and crimes against humanity greatly diminished after the October 7th Hamas attack in Israel and Israel’s subsequent genocide in Gaza, as well as during the war between Russia and Ukraine.
    • China’s genocide and crimes against humanity have continued, now supplemented by a softer strategy that permits a limited number of Uyghurs living abroad to visit relatives in East Turkistan, under strict state surveillance. This tactic is intended to create the illusion for the international community that there is no ongoing genocide, or that China has relaxed its policies.
    • The struggle of the Uyghur diaspora to secure freedom for the people in East Turkistan has neither diminished nor ceased. On the contrary, genocidal repression has intensified Uyghur opposition to Chinese colonial control, fostering a resilient anti-colonial consciousness grounded in shared trauma and dispossession. This movement possesses unique characteristics, and faces significant challenges and institutional weaknesses, yet demonstrates a strong sense of national aspiration.

    Download Full Report Here ( November 12, 2025 )

    About the Author

    CETNI

    Administrator

    Visit Website View All Posts

    Like this:

    Like Loading...

    Post navigation

    Previous: Why Uyghurs Must Prepare for the Possibility of a Major War Between China and its Rivals

    Related Stories

    cetni-report-07-24.jpg
    2 minutes read
    • Reports

    Mass Detention and Forced Assimilation of Uyghur Children in China

    CETNI 3 weeks ago 0
    International-relations-journal-rukiye-feature-image
    • News
    • Reports

    CETNI researcher Mrs. Turdush published her article at INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS JOURNAL

    CETNI 3 weeks ago 0
    uyghur03
    2 minutes read
    • Reports

    The Problem of Classifying Uyghurs as “Indigenous Peoples”

    CETNI 3 years ago 0

    Recent Posts

    • Genocide and Uyghur Resilience: Uniqueness, Current Struggles, and Future Ahead
    • Why Uyghurs Must Prepare for the Possibility of a Major War Between China and its Rivals
    • Behind the Rhetoric: What is China’s Defense White Paper Really About?
    • Why China is Pursuing Uyghurs Beyond its Borders
    • What Uyghurs Could Learn from Ukrainian President Zelensky’s Oval Office Meeting

    Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org

    Email: info@cetni.org

    cetnicontact@gmail.com

    Copyright © 2026 All rights reserved.
    %d