Local legislative entity in rimce the weaker capital, that essentially criminalize forty eight behaviors. No encouraging you children to marry somebody from your own religious ethnic group. A abstantion from alcohol, tobacco, secx,. keeping prayer, mad at your house and keeping religious books. It doesn't this remind you what brings the old memory back from the notse era, that the jewish thought leaders and business leaders and religious leaders were the primate target. And from the jewish an roma community. So this is like a history repeating itself.
In recent years China has been accused of committing crimes against humanity and possibly genocide against the Uyghur ethnic group in the northwestern region of Xinjiang province. Nury Turkel was born in a re-education camp in Kashgar, Xinjiang in 1970. In 1995 he had the opportunity to leave China as a student and was never to return to his home and family. Nury has since dedicated his life to fighting for the rights of Uyghurs – he is Chair of the US Commission on International Religious Freedom and Senior Fellow at the Hudson Institute, specialising in national security and foreign policy. His new book is No Escape: The True Story of China's Genocide of the Uyghurs. Turkel is joined in conversation by our host for this discussion, Yasmeen Serhan, staff writer at The Atlantic, where she focuses on populism and nationalism.
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