RFA Breaking News: Interview: ‘I Did Not Believe I Would Leave Prison in China Alive’
Nov. 1, 2018 - Mihrigul Tursun is a 29-year-old Uyghur woman from northwest China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR) who gave birth to healthy triplets in Egypt while her husband was working there in 2015. Soon after her children were born, she returned to China seeking help from her parents to raise them, but was arrested by XUAR authorities upon arriving by plane in the regional capital Urumqi, and the triplets were taken from her. She was released on “parole” weeks later after learning that her children were suffering from a severe respiratory illness that required surgery, but one of her sons died under mysterious circumstances while being cared for in a local hospital.
In the years since the boy’s death, Tursun was taken into custody several times, including at one of a network of political “re-education camps,” where Chinese authorities began detaining Uyghurs accused of harboring “strong religious views” and “politically incorrect” ideas in April 2017. Tursun said she was targeted because she had lived in Egypt—one of a number of countries blacklisted by authorities in the XUAR because of a perceived threat of religious radicalization.
While she was able to relocate to the U.S. in September, Tursun’s other son and daughter have developed health complications that require constant monitoring, and she has lost all contact with her husband and other family members. She recently spoke with RFA’s Uyghur Service about the struggle she endured during the three years she spent in the XUAR before fleeing China.
RFA: What happened to you and your children after you returned to the XUAR from Egypt?
Tursun: I had triplets—two boys and one girl—in Egypt in 2015. My husband was working there, so I had nobody to help me with the kids and I had to return home [to Cherchen (in Chinese, Qiemo) county, in the XUAR’s Bayin’gholin Mongol (Bayinguoleng Menggu) Autonomous Prefecture] to get help from my parents … When my kids were given a medical checkup in Egypt, their health was in a great shape.
I entered the Urumqi airport with my three kids when they were about two months old, on May 13, 2015. At passport control, they asked me to go with them to a different room and questioned me, saying that police would watch my children while they briefly spoke with me, but the questioning lasted three or four hours. At the end, they put a hood over my head and handcuffed me, and brought me out through a different door. My tickets and other belongings were confiscated and I was taken straight to a prison, where I was held until July.
[The prison authorities] eventually told me I had been “paroled” because my kids were sick, and that I should be with them until their health improved. They also said that I was still under investigation, and that they would contact me whenever they had additional questions for me to answer. They held onto my passport, identification, cellphone—everything.
I went directly to the hospital where my children were … and demanded to see my boy [who was in the emergency care facility], but they wouldn’t allow me to—I could only view him from afar. I couldn’t tell if he was breathing or not … The next day, they called me in and told me they couldn’t save him … They gave me his corpse. They had operated on his neck. The reason they gave for his death was that the treatment hadn’t worked, and that he had been unable to breathe.
The other two kids were okay—all three of them had been given operations on their necks. I was told that since they could not eat, they had to be fed with a tube. I didn’t understand. The babies had been breastfeeding without any issues.
I couldn’t communicate with my husband after I arrived [in the XUAR]. I was told not to communicate overseas. I wanted to let him know what had happened, but I didn’t know how to tell him.
I buried my dead child and then I was left to deal with the trauma of losing one child, all while nursing two others and seeking medical treatment for them, in addition to needing surgery performed on my daughter’s eye … The health of my two kids has been poor ever since—especially my son.
View this story online at: https://www.rfa.org/english/news/uyghur/detentions-11012018100304.html
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