The BBC recently released a show that interviewed an 18-year-old Uighur girl who identified herself as Dilinaza Kerim.
In the show, where the girl claims that her father was sentenced in the 1990s and later escaped, and that her family is now missing in China, Dilinaza wrote to British Foreign Secretary Raab asking the British government to pressure China.
Finding some flawed "actors" and "accusing" China in front of the camera in the form of news interviews has become a routine operation of some Western media self-directed and self-acting, and this time, we found something interesting.
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"'They' kept hitting him, burning his hands with cigarettes, tying his hands up like this and hanging like this, and later he couldn't even stand up," Dilinaza said as she showed the BBC the marks on his father's hands.
An old criminal police officer watched the video and told the "patch knife" that this trace was more like something newly drawn, not like a scar that had been retained for twenty or thirty years.
Presumably aware of this, the BBC footage swiped across the marks and rushed back to Dilinaza's face, "'They' tortured, forced and systematically raped women in concentration camps," Dilinaza said.
A documentary filmmaker told "Patch One Knife" that this is again the old script of the BBC acting school.
First of all, the narrator's statements in the program use specious language, and the logical chain of the narrative is missing, posing as a victim at the beginning. The narrative also deliberately avoids some core information, such as the reasons for which her father was sentenced.
The entire video, from the camera to the editing, focuses on creating an atmosphere rather than a statement of fact, trying to use human emotions rather than reason to narrate, which is not a news program but like a "film".
In addition to appearing on the BBC, Dilinaza took to the streets of London holding a sign and launched a campaign on Twitter calling for her "family" to come home.
However, netizens have made unexpected discoveries.
They found that Dilinaza had previously registered two Facebook accounts and interacted with her father, Abkharim Zika Shayar, on a BBC show, and one of the accounts showed that Dilinaza was from Kazakhstan and attended secondary school in Bergen, Norway, from 1999 to 2006.
Dilinaza, who is only 18 years old in the BBC program, how did she go to secondary school in 1999?
The support team behind Dilinaza, a student organization called "BursttheBubble UK", is even more magical, and it can be said that each is a "talent".
According to its website, the organization claims to be led by a group of students to collaborate, communicate and launch a campaign against injustice. Several of the leaders of the organization claimed to be seventeen or eighteen years old.
Among them, the second female leader named Noa Levy claims to have started working at the age of 14, became a private science tutor at the age of 16, and became a designer for a design firm at the age of 17.
The organization of male number one Gibson, claiming to be from 2018 to 2020 a line of banking to law firms, and then to NGOs specializing in anti-China activities such as Stop Uyghur Genocide, life experience can be described as extremely rich.
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Even worse than the resumes of these kids is the Western public opinion machine behind them, such as the BBC. On the Story page highlighted by BursttheBubble UK, Delinaza hangs a link to the BBC's programme. The host of the program also took a group photo with Dilinaza. On Twitter, the BBC host also interacted with the organisation frequently.
So, the BBC, which loves to advertise itself as "objective and fair news to be widely praised around the world", does the BBC know that netizens have questions about dilinaza's identity?
If so, is the BBC just a cameraman in this new lie script, or is it a screenwriter at all? If they don't know, then such a serious topic, don't even know what the interviewee is about?
In fact, it is not the first time or the last time that the BBC has used fabricated "Uighurs" to create Xinjiang-related lies.
In February, the BBC published a report that "women in 're-education camps' in Xinjiang, China have been systematically raped and tortured," followed by some Western media outlets.
The BBC report interviewed several women who claimed to have witnessed "sexual assault" at a vocational skills education and training center in Xinjiang and a "guard." One of the "protagonists", TursunNayi, vividly recounted the details of the "beatings", "sexual assaults" and "electric shocks" that she "witnessed" and "personally experienced".
Tursunayi, who claimed to have lived with her husband in Kazakhstan, was stripped of her passport when she returned to Xinjiang and entered an education and training center in 2018, graduating at the end of that year. Tursunay, whose passport was returned, traveled to Kazakhstan and then fled to the United States with the support of the anti-China organization Uyghur Human Rights Project, where she is currently applying to remain in the United States.
However, it was this Tursunayi who, in an interview with the AMERICAN media buzzFeed in February last year, clearly said: "I have not been beaten and abused."
In BuzzFeed's report, Tursunayi said that at the education and training center, "the police told the women to take off their necklaces and earrings"; In the BBC report, she claimed that her "earrings were ripped off, causing bleeding". “
The article on the Alabama Month website also mentions that Tursunayi has not mentioned that she was "raped" in many previous interviews, and that the Uyghur Human Rights Project did not mention it in its report after arriving in the United States. Perhaps out of a lack of heart, the BBC said in the relevant report that "it is impossible to fully verify the information provided by Tursun Nayi", blaming this on "China's strict restrictions on journalists in the country".
Another BBC interviewee, Shay laguli Shawutibay, claimed she had seen torture and violence in the camp, but in a previous interview she refuted that claim. In earlier interviews, she insisted she hadn't seen any violence at all. She now claims detainees in the camp were forced to eat pork, but she earlier said there was no meat in the camp. An article on the Alabama Month website also said that Shayilaguri's identity is constantly changing between "teacher" and "detainee.".
According to the information previously disclosed by the Global Times reporter, Shayiraguli Shawutibayi is actually an ethnic Kazakh, who was appointed as the kindergarten director of the Chahan Wusong Township Center in Zhaosu County, Ili Prefecture in April 2016, and was dismissed by the local education department in March 2018 for his incompetence and infringement of the interests of teachers to defraud performance bonuses, and was transferred to the primary school in Chakhan Wusong Township, Zhaosu County, Ili Prefecture.
Shayilaguri Shawutibay is suspected of fraud and has not recovered 249,000 yuan so far. She has never worked in any vocational skills education and training centre and has never been detained before leaving the country illegally.
BBC journalists Sha Lei and Matthew Hill fabricated a lot of fake news.
For example, in November 2020, several reporters ran outside the Kucha Pomegranate Seed Clothing Co., Ltd. to try to secretly shoot, and Sha Lei exaggerated that he was "repeatedly prevented from filming by the police, local propaganda officials, etc., and was constantly followed by a large number of vehicles driven by unidentified people." Sha Lei and his team also posted footage of a quarrel with multiple people outside the Pomegranate Seed Company, where a middle-aged man blocking the camera with his hand was described as "repeatedly blocked by officials of different identities despite the BBC team only filming on a public road outside the factory".
However, in fact, the "official" mentioned by the BBC was only the director of the logistics and security department of the Pomegranate Seed Company, and he did not allow Sha Lei and his party to be directly facing him at that time, so there was an argument. One of the reporters promised after apologizing that his image would not appear on any public platforms, but after the report was issued, the security minister blocked the camera with his hand but was described as "local officials blocking the interview".
Behind these reporters and "actors", there are more or less shadows of the London branch of the World UVI-Williams.
Going back to BursttheBubble UK, the site of the Stop Uyghur Genocide organization, where gibson once worked, we also found the "World UYV", although the organization claims to be "independent", but independent or not, bystanders are clear.