Asia Undercovered

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Asia Undercovered 8 July 2020
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Asia Undercovered 8 July 2020

Nithin Coca
Jul 8, 2020
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This week: The lost children of East Timor, contrasting minority language policies in China and Taiwan, and an little-covered dam collapse in Uzbekistan.

Undercovered this week

Poignant and tragic. The names of disappeared Uyghur artists, scholars, and musicians. Many, perhaps, gone forever.

Twitter avatar for @SuluArtcoSuluArtco @SuluArtco
1. Ilham Tohti 2. Rahile Dawut 3. Halmurat Ghopur 4. Tashpolat Teyip 5. Chimengul Awut 6. Arslan Abdulla 7. Dilmurat Ghopur 8. Jemile Saqi 9. Abdukerim Rahman 10. Abduqadir Jalalidin 11. Zulpiqar Barat 12. Alim Ehet 13. Nurbiye Yadikar 14. Mutellip Sidiq Qahiri
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July 2nd 2020

380 Retweets602 Likes

Back in the 1970s and 80s, it was Indonesia trying to erase East Timor’s culture and identity. Anne Baker writes about a generation of stolen children, forced to live far from their birth parents, and their journeys home in this immersive, powerful feature (ABC Foreign Correspondent).

I wonder…In 20 years, will we be reading stories like about Uyghur children, taken from their parents today, forced to forget their language, culture? History is repeating itself, because we refuse to learn (or act).

Also from Indonesia, the government has announced a massive plan to create a giant farm in the middle of Borneo, meant as a stimulus to combat the economic impact of the pandemic, but which could have worrying ecological impacts (Michael Taylor, Trust).

India’s move to ban Chinese apps has meant that Tibetan communities have lost their single link – WeChat – with family across the border, reports Ashna Butani in The Indian Express.

It was little covered, but in May a dam collapse in Uzbekistan killed six, and forced 110,00 to evacuate. As Eugene Simonov reports, it was a disaster waiting to happen due to faulty planning and lack of cooperation among Central Asian nations (The Third Pole).

Elections

Mongolia’s election results are in – a landslide victory for the incumbent Mongolian People’s Party in what was a peaceful, high-turnout vote. Here’s some analysis from Byambajav Dalaibuyan in East Asia Forum.

Taiwan has long been seen its politics dominated by battles between the pro-China KMT and the pro-independence DPP. But in the capital Taipei, Mayor Ko Wen-je’s new Taiwan People’s Party is charting a new, less divisive path (Bill Sharp)

Imran Khan’s election as Prime Minister of Pakistan was initially seen as a hopeful change for a young, fragile democracy. Today, that hope has faded, argues Tilak Devasher in The Diplomat.

Geopolitics

The geopolitics of airplane Tail Numbers – really enjoyed this piece in Taiwan Gazette that explains why it is not so easy for Taiwan to change the name of its flag carrier, China Airlines, and illuminates the complexity of airlines get permission to land.

Solutions Stories

A stark contrast. China, 1.3 billion people, yet shrinking space for linguistic diversity, with Mongolian now joining Uyghur, Tibetan, Cantonese, and other languages no longer allowed as mediums of local education.

Twitter avatar for @CHRDnetCHRD人权捍卫者 @CHRDnet
When schools re-open in the fall, Mongolian language will be replaced by Han Chinese as the teaching language of all classes, math, science, etc. in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, a step in #China's destruction of ethnic minority culture.

维权网 @weiquanwang

维权网: 新娜:“大力推广国家通用语言文字”的实质就是取消蒙语授课 进而灭绝蒙古文化! https://t.co/KrfDzYeU80 https://t.co/TkDt7MDKbg

July 7th 2020

36 Retweets26 Likes

Meanwhile Taiwan, population 24 million, is officially bilingual, with the government supporting the rejuvenation of its indigenous languages. Here’s are two pieces from Global Voices, one on how a Wikipedia project is booking a language with just a few hundred speakers, Sakizaya, and the second profiling a young Seediq language activist.

And lastly, money is not everything. Research by Zuzy Anna found that while fishers were among the poorest people in Indonesia, they were also among the happiest (The Conversation).


Asia Undercovered: Journalist Nithin Coca’s weekly roundup of the news, events, trends and people changing Asia, but not getting enough attention in the US media.

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