Aug 28, 2007

East Turkestan: Exiles Appeal for ‘Explicit’ Words


In anticipation of her visit to China this week, the World Uighur Congress has pleaded German Chancellor Angela Merkel to adopt a firm stance towards human rights abuses in East Turkestan.

In anticipation of her visit to China this week, the World Uighur Congress has pleaded Merkel to adopt a firm stance towards human rights abuses in East Turkestan.

Below is an article published by Asia-Pacific News:

Exiles belonging to the Uighur ethnic group appealed to Chancellor Angela Merkel to lobby for human rights and for the Uighur minority during her trip next week to China in a letter to the German leader released Friday [24 August 2007].

The Munich-based World Uighur Congress demanded the release of all political prisoners in the Uighur homeland in the Xinjiang region of north-west China. The organization also said in the letter that Merkel should speak out for the abolishment of the death penalty in Xinjiang, the closure of labour camps, and an end to human-rights abuses and Chinese immigration to the region.

'The policies of the Chinese government threatens the civilization, culture, religion and the existence of the Uighur people,' said the letter to the chancellor, who is to visit China from Sunday [26 August 2007] through Wednesday [29 August 2007].

The exiled Uighurs charged Chinese authorities with suppression, arbitrary arrests and executions of political prisoners in Xinjiang. Relatives of dissidents are convicted without evidence and sent to prison, they said, adding that Merkel should specifically lobby for the release of the son of Rebiya Kadeer, the president of the World Uighur Congress.

'We expect explicit words from you,' the letter told Merkel, adding in a reference to human-rights issues she brought up on a trip to Russia, 'What was right in Russia cannot be wrong in China.'

After their rise to power in Beijing in 1949, the Communists annexed the region where 20 million of the Turkic people live today. Many Uighurs demand the re-establishment of their earlier republic of East Turkistan and are regarded as separatists by the Chinese government.