The Urumqi Massacre

Remember July 5 — Urumqi Massacre Memorial | Voice of Uyghurs
In Memoriam · July 5, 2009

Remember
July 5The Urumqi Massacre · 17 Years On

For the lives lost. For the disappeared.
For those who are still searching.

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Seventeen years ago, peaceful Uyghur voices in Urumqi were met with bloodshed. Today, we gather to remember the innocent lives lost — and to make sure they are never forgotten.

What Happened

On the afternoon of July 5, 2009, Uyghurs — many of them students — gathered peacefully at People’s Square in Urumqi to demand justice after Uyghur workers were killed in a factory attack in Shaoguan, thousands of miles away.

According to Uyghur witnesses, the demonstration was intended to be peaceful; some carried flags to signal they sought no confrontation. By nightfall, the streets had turned to tragedy. In the days and weeks that followed, countless young Uyghurs were detained in sweeping raids — many never seen again.

The true death toll remains disputed to this day. Chinese authorities reported 197 dead; Uyghur witnesses and rights groups believe the number was far higher. The fate of the disappeared is still unknown.

2009
The year it happened
Jul 5
A day of remembrance
~10 mo
Internet cut across the region
Untold
The disappeared, still missing
An extraordinarily high number of people to be killed and injured in less than a day.
— UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, 2009

Why We Remember

For the Uyghur people, July 5 is more than a date in a history book. It is a day to mourn those who were killed, to remember those who disappeared and were never returned to their families, and to insist that the truth not be buried.

Behind every number is a name. A son. A daughter. A father. A friend. Remembering is an act of resistance against forgetting.

Light a Candle

Join us in a moment of silence. Light a candle wherever you are this July 5, and share it with #RememberJuly5. Together, our light is brighter.

A candle has been lit. lights and counting.
Voice of Uyghurs Preserving our heritage, sharing our story, raising our voice.
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Sources: World Uyghur Congress · Human Rights Watch · UN OHCHR · Radio Free Asia · Congressional-Executive Commission on China. Accounts of July 5, 2009 differ between Chinese authorities and Uyghur witnesses; figures shown reflect that this history remains contested.

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