BEIJING: Chinese state media have said Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan disclosed to President Xi Jinping that ethnic minorities live peacefully in Xinjiang, in what might be an unmistakable inversion of Ankara's past analysis of Beijing's crackdown in the region. 

Erdogan met Xi at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Tuesday, four months after the Turkish outside service called the treatment of for the most part Muslim Turkic-speaking Uighurs "an incredible humiliation for mankind". 

China has gone under developing analysis over its security clampdown in the northwest region, where more than one million Uighurs and other for the most part Muslim minorities are accepted to be held in a system of internment camps. 

Beijing denies coercively holding individuals in what it portrays as "professional instruction focuses" where "students" learn Mandarin and employment abilities with an end goal to control them far from religious fanaticism. 

Muslim nations had been to a great extent quiet about China's treatment of Uighurs until Turkey's announcement in February, however the authority Xinhua news organization detailed more pleasant words from Erdogan on Tuesday. 

"Turkey stays committed to the one-China policy, Erdogan said, stressing that residents of various ethnicities living happily in Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region thanks to China’s prosperity is a hard fact, and Turkey will not allow anyone to drive a wedge in its relations with China," Xinhua reported.

"He additionally communicated the preparation to develop political shared trust and fortify security participation with China in restricting radicalism," it included.