Arsenal distances itself from midfielder Mesut Özil's remarks on China, Uighurs

English football club Arsenal took a stab at Dec. 14 to separate itself from the remarks of its star midfielder Mesut Özil after he posted messages on Twitter and Instagram reproachful of China's strategies toward its Muslim Uighur minority.

 China, Uighurs

"The substance he communicated is completely Özil's sincere belief," the official record of Arsenal Football Club said in a post on China's Twitter-like Weibo stage.

"As a football club, Arsenal consistently holds fast to the standard of not being associated with governmental issues."

The club's Twitter account didn't have a post tending to Özil's remarks as of Dec. 15.

Özil's posts called Uighurs "warriors who oppose abuse" and scrutinized both China's crackdown and the quiet of Muslims accordingly.

"(In China) Qurans are scorched, mosques were shut down, Islamic philosophical schools, madrasas were restricted, strict researchers were slaughtered individually.

Regardless of this, Muslims remain calm," Özil, who is a Muslim, said in his posts.


Answers to Arsenal's Weibo post were furious, with one demonstrating a destroyed Özil football shirt alongside a couple of scissors and others requesting he be ousted from the club.

A quest on Weibo for the hashtag translatable as "Özil issues improper articulation", which had been one of the top drifting subjects on the stage, restored no outcomes on Dec. 14 evening.

Weibo every now and again blue pencils talk of delicate themes, especially in the midst of a push by Beijing to tidy up its web.

The Chinese Football Association told government-upheld news outlet, The Paper, on Dec. 14 it was "offended and disillusioned" by Özil's comments, portraying them as "wrong".

"Özil's remarks are undoubtfully frightful to the Chinese fans who intently tail him, and simultaneously his remarks likewise hurt the sentiments of Chinese individuals. This is something we can't acknowledge," the news outlet cited an anonymous authority from the relationship as saying.

The United Nations and human rights bunches gauge that between 1 million and 2 million individuals, for the most part ethnic Uighur Muslims, have been confined in brutal conditions in Xinjiang as a feature of what Beijing calls an enemy of psychological warfare battle.

China has over and again prevented any abuse from securing Uighurs.

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