On 26 November 2018, Mihrigul Tursun gave testimony at
National Press Club in Washington, DC. There she claimed that detainees in those camps are beaten, starved, electrocuted, and strip-searched. She said: On 28 November 2018, Mihrigul Tursun, speaking through a translator, testified before the
Congressional-Executive Commission on China about her experience over a series of three internments. She said: "There were around 60 people kept in a cell so at nights, 10 to 15 women would stand up while the rest of us would sleep on sideways so we could fit, and then we would rotate every 2 hours. There were people who had not taken a shower over a year." In December 2018, Tursun received a Citizen Power Award. Tursun in an interview stated that she has not seen her husband since 2015, and she has learned that upon his return to China in 2016 he was arrested and sentenced to 16 years of imprisonment (of which his family was not informed and about which she learned only in 2018). In 2019
What Has Happened to Me – A Testimony of a Uyghur Woman, a
Japanese comic book recounting the story told by Mihrigul Tursun, illustrated by artist Tomomi Shimizu, has become a viral hit on the Internet. ==According to the Government of China==