2020-03-03
The mother and daughter of a wealthy
Uyghur family in northwest China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region
(XUAR) have been sentenced to lengthy jail terms related to their
overseas connections, according to family members who live abroad and
local officials.
Earlier this year, a Uyghur exile in
Turkey named Zohre Abduhemit posted video testimony as part of the
“Uyghur Pulse” project documenting missing relatives in the XUAR, saying
that his cousin Nigare Abdushukur, 25, and her 52-year-old mother,
Merhaba, had been sentenced to nearly two decades in prison.
“They were detained [at an internment
camp] and, at the end of 2018, given prison sentences of 19 years,”
Abduhemit says in the video, without explaining how he had come to learn
of their incarceration.
“Hey, Communist China, what are their
crimes? You have locked up more than 3 million of our people in camps.
What are their crimes? I ask for help for East Turkestan from the United
Nations and Muslim countries.”
Abduhemit uses the name East Turkestan,
which many Uyghurs use to refer to the XUAR, where authorities are
believed by experts to have held as many as 1.8 million Uyghurs and
other Muslim minorities accused of harboring “strong religious views”
and “politically incorrect” ideas in a vast network of internment camps
since April 2017, although estimates on the number of those detained
vary.
His claim suggests that authorities have
locked up more than one-quarter of the XUAR’s Uyghur population in the
camps, which China has described as “boarding schools” that provide
vocational training for Uyghurs, discourage radicalization, and help
protect the country from terrorism.
But reporting by RFA’s Uyghur Service and
other media outlets indicate that those in the camps are detained
against their will and subjected to political indoctrination, routinely
face rough treatment at the hands of their overseers, and endure poor
diets and unhygienic conditions in the often overcrowded facilities.
After Abduhemit recorded his video
testimony, a Uyghur woman in Germany named Gulzire Taschmemet, who is
familiar with Abdushukur and her relatives, posted information on social
media saying that the family is wealthy and had achieved an official
designation of “stable,” suggesting that they would not have been
targeted by authorities in the XUAR for punishment or indoctrination.
Taschmemet said she believes Abdushukur
was sentenced because she communicated with her brother, who also lives
in Germany, while Merhaba may have been targeted for taking a two-week
trip to Turkey in 2015.
Authorities in the XUAR regularly punish
Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities for actions that were permitted at
the time, but years later deemed “separatist,” including traveling to
countries the government has blacklisted because of a perceived threat
of “extremism.”
Other information circulating on social
media indicated that Abdushukur and her mother are registered residents
of the Dongmele district of Ghulja (in Chinese, Yining) city, in the
XUAR’s Ili Kazakh (Yili Hasake) Autonomous Prefecture, and that her
father, Abdushukur Memet, is a successful businessman.
Additionally, reports said, Abdushukur
had studied both Mandarin Chinese and English before graduating from
Xinjiang Normal University in the XUAR capital Urumqi in 2017,
suggesting she would have had no need for “vocational training.”
‘Wouldn’t cooperate’
‘Wouldn’t cooperate’
RFA’s Uyghur Service spoke with two
different police officers at the Dongmele Public Security Bureau (PSB),
both of whom said no one by the name of Nigare Abdushukur or Merhaba was
a resident of the district.
When asked whether Abdushukur had been
detained, the Dongmele PSB police chief told RFA that he could not
discuss the details of such cases over the phone without proof of
identity, and referred further questions to his superiors.
However, RFA spoke with a district
government employee who said that Abdushukur had been sent to an
internment camp in November 2017 for informing her brother about their
mother’s detention in a phone call.
“Nigare told her brother in Germany that
their mother had been taken to a camp when they were talking on the
phone and later, when she was interrogated about it, she wouldn’t
cooperate with the police, so that’s why she was sentenced to 19 years,”
the employee said, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of
reprisal.
“Her mother, Merhaba, was detained [in a
camp] for having gone to Turkey, but I don’t know what kind of problems
might have come up during her interrogation [that led to her
imprisonment].”
RFA also spoke with an employee of the
local judicial administrative office who, when asked where Abdushukur
had been taken, said it “looks like she’s in Yengihayat Prison” in
Ghulja.
A resident of the district, who also
declined to be named, acknowledged to RFA that it was possible
Abdushukur had been incarcerated in Yengihayat.
Wealthy at risk
Sources have told RFA that authorities in
the XUAR regularly target wealthy Uyghurs who they see as a threat to
Communist Party rule in the region.
In December, RFA learned that Eli
Abdulla, the CEO of Xinjiang Yu Cheng (Jade City) Real Estate
Development Ltd. and one of the wealthiest Uyghurs in Hotan (Hetian)
prefecture, was jailed for life in 2017 after he went missing a year
earlier, and that dozens of his relatives and employees had also been
sentenced to prison.
An official said he was told that Abdulla
was sentenced because he had donated a large sum of money to a local
mosque, but suggested the developer was targeted because of what he said
was “serious tension” between Uyghur-owned companies and those run by
majority Han Chinese from outside the XUAR over the rights to mining
jade in the region.
Last year, multiple reports from official
media said that the central government had ordered local authorities to
investigate the finances of all owners of private companies throughout
the XUAR, at the same time that internment camps were being built in the
region.
According to the directive, the reports
said, private business owners were required to fill out declaration
forms at the time that provided detailed financial information about
their assets and submit them to relevant government departments, where
they were subjected to strict review.
Reported by Shohret Hoshur for RFA’s Uyghur Service. Translated by Elise Anderson. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.
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