MCLC: Uighur scholar detained

Denton, Kirk denton.2 at osu.edu
Fri Jan 17 08:58:04 EST 2014


MCLC LIST
From: pjmooney <pjmooney at me.com>
Subject: Uighur scholar detained
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Source: Reuters (1/16/14):
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/01/16/us-china-xinjiang-idUSBREA0F0G120
140116

China detains prominent Uighur scholar for "breaking the law"

(Reuters) - Chinese police have detained the country's most high-profile
Uighur academic, an outspoken critic of official policies in the restive
far-western region of Xinjiang, on suspicion of "breaking the law", the
government said on Thursday.

Wednesday's detention is the latest indication of the government's
increasing hardline stance on dissent surrounding Xinjiang, where a series
of violent riots in the past year have killed at least 91 people, rights
activists say.
Xinjiang is home to the Muslim Uighur people who speak a Turkic language.
Many resent what they see as oppressive treatment by the government,
though Beijing says they are granted wide religious, cultural and
linguistic freedoms.

Police in Beijing seized Ilham Tohti, a prominent Uighur economist who has
championed the rights of the Uighur community in Xinjiang, at his home and
his whereabouts were unknown, his wife and close friend told Reuters.

Tohti has challenged the government's version of several incidents
involving Uighurs, including what Beijing says is its first major suicide
attack involving two men from Xinjiang in Beijing's Tiananmen Square, by
pointing out inconsistencies in the official accounts, said Nicholas
Bequelin, a senior researcher at Human Rights Watch.

"Ilham is suspected of breaking the law," Chinese Foreign Ministry
spokesman Hong Lei said at a daily news briefing.

"The public security organs have detained him in accordance with the law.
The relevant departments will now deal with him in accordance with the
law."

Tohti's wife, Guzailai Nu'er, said around 30 police from Xinjiang and
Beijing arrived at her apartment to seize Tohti and confiscate his
computer and books. They did not give her a reason, she said.

"I trust my husband. He didn't do anything unlawful," she said in a phone
interview from her apartment, which was surrounded by police. "All he has
done is write detailed articles researching the population in Xinjiang.
There's nothing else to it."

Tsering Woeser, a prominent Tibetan writer and friend, said Tohti told her
a week ago that he had heard the authorities in Xinjiang had told Beijing
police that they wanted to arrest him, but later heard that Beijing didn't
approve it.

"At that time, he said that he felt he was in a very dangerous position,"
Woeser said.

Tohti, an economics professor at Beijing's Minzu University which
specializes in ethnic minority studies, told Reuters in November that
state security agents had physically threatened him for speaking to
foreign reporters.

Bequelin said Tohti's detention reflected a harder stance that Chinese
President Xi Jinping has taken on Xinjiang. State media called this a
"strategy shift" from development to maintaining social stability.

Bequelin said Tohti could be charged with "incitement for separatism",
which carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.

"The test of what constitutes incitement of separatism is anything that
opposes ethnic harmony," he said.

Tohti, Bequelin said, was "an intellectual trying to get the state to see
objectively what the situation is".

"He wants to tell truth to power," he said. "I cannot see anything that he
has written or done that can be construed as endangering state security.
But the outcome is a foregone conclusion."

(Additional reporting by Maxim Duncan; Editing by Nick Macfie)



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