The report provides a thorough analysis of how the boarding school system functions as a tool of cultural genocide within the Uyghur homeland, tracing the origins of China's assimilation efforts against the Uyghurs, including how narratives of "counter-terrorism" have been employed to legiti
Union Consumer Affairs and Food Minister Pralhad Joshi on Wednesday said Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) has issued notice to Amazon India, Flipkart, Ubuy India and Etsy over the sale of Pakistani flags and related merchandise.
At the 2025 Copenhagen Democracy Summit, Uyghur-American activist Rushan Abbas brought international attention to the ongoing repression of Uyghurs in China, framing the crisis as not only a human rights emergency but a growing global threat to democratic values.
"Mao Zedong is the world's greatest murderer. He is the greatest terrorist who imprisoned many nationalities in the Chinese state prisons," Gheni claimed.
Taiwan's Council of Indigenous Peoples has criticised a former legislator for echoing "United Front" slogans during an event in China, asserting that Taiwan's indigenous peoples are not "descendants of the Yellow Emperor," Taipei Times reported.
China is accused of pushing a "revisionist" version of World War II history, framing itself as a victorious nation and attempting to reshape global perceptions, according to a source familiar with foreign affairs.
The World Uyghur Congress (WUC) has issued its latest weekly brief, warning that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is intensifying its campaign of repression in Xinjiang while much of the democratic world remains either complicit or silent. One of the most alarming disclosures in the brief i
The Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) has initiated action against the listing and sale of walkie-talkie devices on e-commerce platforms that lack proper disclosures, including licensing, Union Minister of Consumer Affairs announced on Friday.
The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is providing financial support to templegoers in Taiwan and subsidising trips for them to visit China, as stated by a Taiwanese intelligence official, according to a report by Taipei Times.
A Taiwanese intelligence official revealed that the Chinese Communist Party is funding trips for Taiwanese temple-goers to attend religious and cultural events in China, offering financial incentives to local organisers as part of united front efforts to deepen cross-strait influence.
Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) has raised concerns that a cross-strait essay contest organized by a Taipei-based society and a CCP-linked publisher may violate laws prohibiting political cooperation with mainland Chinese entities, citing all-expenses-paid trips and ties to Beijing's