Headlines
  • False or misleading informations are spread by organizations posing as legitimate media outlets in an attempt to twist public opinion in favor of a certain ideology.
  • On social media,watch out for fake messages,pictures,Videos and news.
  • Always Check Independent Fact Checking Sites if You Have Some Doubts About the Authenticity of Any Information or Picture or video.
  • Check Google Images for AuthThe Google Reverse Images search can helps you.
  • It Would Be Better to Ignore Social Media Messages that are forwarded from Unknown or Little-Known Sources.
  • If a fake message asks you to share something, you can quickly recognize it as fake messege.
  • It is a heinous crime and punishable offence to post obscene, morphed images of women on social media networks, sometimes even in pornographic websites, as retaliation.
  • Deepfakes use artificial intelligence (AI)-driven deep learning software to manipulate preexisting photographs, videos, or audio recordings of a person to create new, fake images, videos, and audio recordings.
  • AI technology has the ability to manipulate media and swap out a genuine person's voice and likeness for similar counter parts.
  • Deepfake creators use this fake substance to spread misinformation and other illegal activities.Deepfakes are frequently used on social networking sites to elicit heated responses or defame opponents.
  • One can identify AI created fake videos by identifying abnormal eye movement, Unnatural facial expressions, a lack of feeling, awkward-looking hand,body or posture,unnatural physical movement or form, unnatural coloring, Unreal-looking hair,teeth that don't appear natural, Blurring, inconsistent audio or noise, images that appear unnatural when slowed down, differences between hashtags blockchain-based digital fingerprints, reverse image searches.
  • Look for details,like stange background,orientation of teeth,handsclothing,asymmetrical facial features,use reverse image search tools.

More Details

U.S.-Based Uyghur Man Calls on China to Release His 19-Year-Old Sister

Kamile Wayit was detained after posting video about the recent ‘white paper’ protests across China.

By Jane Tang for RFA Mandarin

Kamile Wayit, a 19-year-old college student at a university in China’s Hebei province, was detained by police in December after returning to Xinjiang on winter break.Credit:Courtesy of Kav Salwaiti Via RFA

A Uyghur man working as an engineer in the United States has called on Chinese authorities in the northwestern region of Xinjiang to release his 19-year-old sister, who was detained in December after posting a video relating to November’s  “white paper” protests across China.

“My 19-year-old sister Kamile Wayit has been detained last month, on Dec. 12,” her brother Kewser Wayit said in a short video on his Twitter account on Jan. 22.

“She was a freshman in college studying preschool education at a university in Hebei province of China. However, when she went back for winter break, she has been detained by the local Artush city police after her arrival at home,” he said, describing his sister as “caring, courageous and clever.”

“She’s innocent, and committed no crime. I demand the Chinese authorities to release her immediately and let her speak to me,” he said. “I won’t stop until she’s free.”

Kamile Wayit’s detention comes as the authorities detain dozens of young people around the country for taking part in the #white paper” protests in late November.

Sparked by a fatal lockdown fire in an apartment building in Xinjiang’s regional capital Urumqi, the protests also took aim at the rolling lockdowns, mass surveillance and compulsory testing of the zero-COVID policy, with some protesters holding up blank sheets of A4 printing paper and others calling on President Xi Jinping to step down and call elections. 

“I don’t know the reason for her detention, but it could be because of one of her posts on WeChat,” he told Radio Free Asia in a later interview. “When the uprising … the protests started in China after the Urumqi fire, she did post something about that.” 

“And then the police called my father about it,” he said. “So it could be related to that or it could be related to me being abroad and being a bit, you know, active, here.”

“Mature and thoughtful”

Kewser Wayit described Kamile as “very mature and thoughtful” despite her young age, which he ascribed to her traditional Uyghur upbringing in an educated and cultivated family.

“She has read a lot of books about our history, our traditions, about culture, faith and a lot of other things that she can’t unlearn,” he said. “What China is trying to do now, the forced assimilation and trying to reinvent [Uyghur] society by wiping out our culture, our religion, really doesn’t fit with the environment she [was raised in].”

“She didn’t see herself fitting into this place, after seeing so many of her friends change over the past five or six years,” he said. “She still held onto her reason, which I also think presented a challenge to the authorities.”

Kamile had suffered particularly while living alone in an Urumqi high school dorm while her beloved father was in a “re-education” camp between 2017 and 2019, Kewser Wayit said.

“She was going through trauma and depression in those two years, especially because … she was all alone,” he said. “I later learned that those days were really tough for her, that wouldn’t even be able to sleep at night time.”

“She had nightmares and … remained unstable to this day,” he said, describing Kamile as “a fragile kind of soul.”

But she had been a happy, talkative child, he recalled.

“Since she was really, really young, like four or five years old, she would talk a lot and she would tell us a lot of stories,” he said. “Because in the beginning she was brought up by my grandparents.”

Families disappearing

He said many other families in his hometown in Artush are “being taken away or disappearing,” citing the case of his cousin Zulpiqar Qudret, a Shanghai Jiaotong University computer science student who went missing during the summer vacation of 2022 for “using foreign news software,” and who remains in custody today.

Kewser Wayit said he doesn’t want to think about what his sister has been going through in detention.

“I’m imagining what she has been going through for the past 50 days … because if she’s been going through interrogation, you know, whatever they do in custody, it hurts my feelings [just to think about it],” he said.

But he said he won’t remain silent any longer.

“I was silent for almost two years, while the people around me were also losing their relatives, and we just didn’t know what to do,” he said. “[I felt like] if I spoke up, then my mother would be detained, or my siblings, which is just the fear they put inside of us to stop us speaking up.”

“Dictatorships use fear to thrive on,” he said, warning that people overseas won’t be exempt as the Chinese Communist Party redoubles efforts to “export oppression” far beyond its borders.

“It would be a great time to speak up now, because China is afraid for their reputation and they’re afraid of us activists,” he said.

Translated by Luisetta Mudie. Edited by Malcolm Foster.

Copyright © 1998-2020, RFA. Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia, 2025 M St. NW, Suite 300, Washington DC 20036. https://www.rfa.org

Related Article

North Korean women in China catch…

A rare video clip that shows North Korean women — dispatched to China as workers — dancing with ...
November 23, 2024

Mary Jane Veloso, a Filipina on…

Mary Jane Veloso, a Filipina who has spent 14 years on death row in Indonesia, will be coming home b ...
November 21, 2024

Myanmar Junta Airstrike Kills Vhildren Playing…

Myanmar’s air force bombed a church where displaced people were sheltering near the border with Ch ...
November 18, 2024

Bangkok Court Clears Thai Woman of…

A Bangkok court on Thursday acquitted a Thai woman accused of supporting two Chinese ethnic Uyghur m ...
November 8, 2024

Residents of Kamala Harris’s Ancestral Indian…

At the Hindu temple in Thulasendrapuram, the ancestral village of Kamala Harris, in Tamil Nadu, Indi ...
November 7, 2024

TikTok Deletes Videos Related to Uyghur…

Authorities in Xinjiang have banned Uyghurs from using social media apps, including Chinese-owned ...
November 6, 2024

Other Article

Video Report

Guatemalan Journalist Dedicates Career to Give Voice to Indigenous Groups

In an effort to amplify the voices of those affected by human rights and environmental issues, a Gua ...
November 24, 2024
News & Views

North Korean women in China catch…

A rare video clip that shows North Korean women — dispatched to China as workers — dancing with ...
November 23, 2024
Video Report

Russia’s Full-Scale Invasion Pushes Ukraine’s Drive…

Ukraine now a world leader in the driver, to digitize government services, from digital passports to ...
Video Report

As UN Warns Kabul’s Groundwater Could…

Due to acute water shortages, residents of Kabul often have to wait for drinking water for hours at ...
November 22, 2024
Video Report

Despite Risks,Unaccompanied Child Migrants Keep Crossing…

One of the top entry points for migrants under the age of eighteen who enter the United States witho ...
News & Views

Mary Jane Veloso, a Filipina on…

Mary Jane Veloso, a Filipina who has spent 14 years on death row in Indonesia, will be coming home b ...
November 21, 2024

[wp-rss-aggregator feeds="crime-more-world"]
Top