A Chinese researcher from Japan participated in a conference organized by China

A Chinese researcher from Japan participated in a conference organized by China and said: "The rumor that a genocide was carried out in Xinjiang is completely false."
According to China News Network, the so-called "5th International Symposium on Combating Terrorism, Eradicating Terrorism, and Ensuring Human Rights" was held at Southwest Political and Legal University of China on May 29. Tadayoshi Murata, an honorary professor at Japan's Yokohama National University, commented on the population data released by China at the conference and said, "It is completely false to say that the Uyghurs and other ethnic groups in Xinjiang were subjected to genocide."
At the meeting, Tadayoshi Murata first repeated the false data on the population of East Turkistan that China had released to deceive the international community about the genocide. Also, in line with China's evidence-free and false propaganda, international expert groups and research institutes published evidence-based investigation reports, authoritative media organizations visited East Turkistan, and dozens of Uyghur witnesses testified about China's crimes.
Chinese scholar Tadayoshi Murata, born in 1946, is a professor of anthropology at Japan's Yokohama National University, and a well-known Chinese expert in Japan. He previously translated and published the book "The Biography of Mao Zedong" into Japanese.
Tadayoshi Murata was the vice president of the Japan-China Friendship Association of Kanagawa Prefecture. He even insisted that the island of Sinkako, which China and Japan are disputing, belongs to China. Tadayoshi Murata previously participated in teaching activities in China in the name of promoting Sino-Japanese friendship. He also donated computers to Chinese universities and became an adjunct professor in those schools.
China is currently intensifying its false propaganda against Japan. On May 30, a delegation from the Japanese Chuangjia Scientific Association visited Urumqi. The Chinese official who received them, Ma Xingrui, denied the genocide in East Turkistan and noted that Japan and East Turkistan have deep roots in Buddhism.

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03/06/2024
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