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Uigur

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Uigur

Member of a Turkic people living in northwestern China, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan; they form about 80% of the population of the Chinese province of Xinjiang Uygur. There are about 5 million speakers of Uigur, a language belonging to the Turkic branch of the Altaic family; it is the official language of the province.

The Uigur are known to have lived in the region since the 3rd century AD, and ruled Mongolia in the 8th century. The Uigur Empire was destroyed by the Kirgiz in 840, after which it split into two kingdoms, one in Kansu and the other in Bishbalik and Karakhoja. The Uigur converted to Islam in the 14th century, although shamanism is still practised. They came under Chinese rule in the 17th century, at which time a small number fled to Kazakhstan. Farmers and stock breeders, they practise irrigation in valley oases to produce cereals and cotton. Their culture is close to that of the Uzbeks.



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China's government has blamed the riots on overseas Uigur groups which it says are terrorists agitating for greater Uighur rights in their Xinjiang homeland.
Today, a Yolngu person from Arnhem Land, a Welsh speaker from Britain and an Uigur from China would recognise each other's concerns for the political and cultural future of their peoples in a way that their ancestors would not have been able to.
After the (Shaoguan) incident, the three forces abroad strived to beat this up and seized it as an opportunity to attack us, inciting street protests," Xinjiang governor and a Uigur hmself, Nuer Baikeli, said in a speech shown on Xinjiang television.
 
 
 
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