Twitter deleted a tweet from the Chinese embassy in Washington insulting Uighur women



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After posting a tweet containing a photo that many human rights organizations considered to contain an insult to the Uighur community, Twitter decided to remove the offensive tweet, which was posted by the Chinese embassy in the United States.

The Beijing embassy in Washington posted a tweet defending the Communist Party’s policy against the Uighur Muslim minority, which is being oppressed, and said in the tweet that Uighur women were no longer “baby-making machines.”

The embassy claimed that China’s policy towards the Uyghur minority allowed the emancipation of women.

Twitter deleted the tweet to strip Uighur women of their humanity, and a Twitter spokesperson was quoted as saying: “We prohibit the dehumanization of a group of people on the basis of their religion or race.”

“The study shows that by eliminating extremism, the minds of Uighur women in Xinjiang have been liberated, gender equality and reproductive health have been promoted, and Uighur women are no longer child-making machines,” the embassy wrote. in the tweet.

The image of the deleted Tweet

The tweet followed an article in China Daily, the English-language newspaper of the Communist Party of China, alleging that the drop in births in Xinjiang, the Uyghur region, is due to the eradication of religious extremism.

Although the tweet was posted on Thursday, Twitter did not remove it until Saturday morning after it sparked an uproar and was denounced by prominent US politicians.

Several Western countries and organizations, including the United States, the European Union and the United Nations, have criticized China’s policies in Xinjiang and recently highlighted forced labor practices that include Uighur Muslims.

Human rights organizations accuse China of reducing births in the region by using inhumane practices such as forcing women to take birth control pills, forced abortions and sterilization.

Uyghurs form the main ethnic minority in Xinjiang, a large Chinese region with borders especially with Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Rights activists say that Xinjiang includes a vast network of out-of-law detention camps, where there are at least one million people, but China says these are vocational training centers aimed at countering extremism.



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