Uyghur Repatriation
Imminent
May
27, 2011
– An ethnic Uyghur, once acknowledged by the U.N. as a refugee, is set to
be deported to China after a Kazakh court refused to grant him political
asylum, according to his brother.
Ershidin
Israil, 38, fled to Kazakhstan in the aftermath of deadly riots in the Xinjiang
Uyghur Autonomous Region and has been held by Kazakh authorities since June
last year amid Chinese accusations he was involved in "terrorism."
Experts say the court ruling on Wednesday called into question Kazakhstan's
adherence to international obligations in the face of increased pressure from
neighboring China where Israil could be severely punished on his return.
Seeking political asylum in Kazakhstan may have been Israil’s last bid to
stay out of China, whose anti-terrorism policy, according to rights groups,
deliberately targets activists among ethnic minority communities such as Uyghurs
and Tibetans.
If repatriated to his home country, he is likely to face harsh punishment in a
specific case of informing RFA about the death in custody of a fellow Uyghur
held by authorities for alleged involvement in July 2009 riots in
Xinjiang’s capital Urumqi.
His brother Enver Israil, who arrived in Kazakhstan three months ago, said he
heard from his brother's lawyer that he was accused of being a terrorist by the
Chinese police and that they had demanded his return.
"[The Chinese police] tortured a jailed protester to death and nobody is
calling the Chinese terrorists, but my brother is accused of terrorism just
because he told the media about the killing," he said in a phone interview
Thursday from Almaty, the country’s largest city.
"Where is the justice?" he asked.
Seeking refuge
On Sept. 24, 2009, Israil fled on foot to Almaty from the Xinjiang Uyghur
Autonomous Region (XUAR), crossing the border without a passport after four
nights of walking.
Chinese authorities in Ghulja, in Qorghas (in Chinese, Huocheng) county, Ili
prefecture were searching for Israil for allegedly releasing details of the
Sept. 18 beating death of Shohret Tursun, according to Israil’s
sister-in-law.
Tursun was detained among a group of 40 Uyghurs in July 2009 around the time of
ethnic riots in Urumqi that left some 200 dead.
His badly bruised and disfigured body was released to his relatives nearly two
months later, prompting a standoff between authorities who wanted him buried
immediately and family members who refused and demanded an inquiry into whether
he had been beaten to death.
The family was forced to hold a burial for Tursun the following day.
In a previous RFA interview with Israil, he said he fled his hometown fearing
harsh punishment from Chinese authorities as a two-time offender. Israil had
previously served a six-year jail sentence in 1999 for "separatism."
After meeting with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Almaty,
Israil was granted refugee status in March 2010 and accepted for resettlement
in Sweden that April.
But while making final preparations to leave Kazakhstan, a UNHCR official
informed Israil that Kazakh authorities had refused to supply him with the
necessary documents to leave the country.
On April 3, Israil was moved into an apartment guarded around the clock by
Kazakh police officers while the UNHCR investigated the delay in his
resettlement.
In June 2010, he was detained by local authorities and has since attended a
total of five hearings on his application for refugee status, all of which
rejected his bid and ruled that he must be returned to China.
‘A terrible track record’
Exiled Uyghur dissident Rebiya Kadeer, president of the Munich-based World
Uyghur Congress (WUC), said the Kazakh government is disregarding international
law by moving to repatriate Israil.
She called the Chinese charges against him “an obvious abuse of the
Geneva Convention rules,” adding that he had committed no crime aside
from revealing how Uyghurs have been treated in the aftermath of the 2009
riots.
“I urge the U.N. and EU to take
action," she said. “I would
ask the
Kazakh
government to not forget our blood relations and to take
into
consideration the one million Uyghurs who are living in Kazakhstan."
Memet Tohti, the WUC representative in Geneva, said China is desperate to take
Israil back to prevent him from talking about the abuses he had witnessed and
in order to show other Uyghurs that they cannot defy the government and escape
punishment.
"Ershidin was in jail for six years and he is aware of a number of tragic
stories that have taken place in China's black jails," he said, referring
to the country's growing number of unofficial detention centers which serve as
holding camps for petitioners seeking redress against official wrongdoing.
"Secondly, Chinese authorities want to discourage Uyghurs in East
Turkestan from taking part in the Uyghur freedom movement by showing them that
they can get to them no matter in what part of the world they seek
refuge."
Uyghur groups use the term “East Turkestan” to refer to a
short-lived Uyghur government that existed before the communist takeover of
Xinjiang or to assert their cultural distinctiveness from China proper.
Nury Turkel, a Uyghur American attorney based in Washington, said Kazakhstan’s
refusal to grant Israil political asylum is the latest example of the country
bowing to Chinese pressure.
“Kazakhstan has a terrible track record of repatriating or forcibly
removing Uyghurs to China who were suspected of being involved in any political
activities, and history certainly will not be kind to Kazakhstan,” he
said.
“Kazakhstan—being under the Soviet Union for several years and
knowing how it feels to be oppressed—I think it’s time for
Kazakhstan to enjoy their sovereignty and make a decision based on their
international obligations, not on the pressure by neighboring countries.”
An uncertain future
Sharon Hom, executive director of Human Rights in China, a New York- and Hong
Kong-based group, said that as a member of the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (SCO), a regional group for security and economic cooperation in
Eurasia, Kazakhstan has a number of obligations to fellow SCO states,
particularly China.
“These include forcible returns to China of any individual or group
suspected of terrorism, separatism, or extremism, including individuals who may
have been granted refugee status by UNHCR,” Hom said.
“China has designated Central Asia as a source of what it terms the 'East
Turkestan' threat and has exerted intensified pressure on its neighbors, and
most recently on Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan.”
Hom noted that Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan—both SCO member
states—obstructed travel of Uyghur activists to attend a recent
conference in the U.S., apparently to preserve their relationship with China.
Hom said that Israil could “disappear” if he is deported to China,
like many others forcibly returned to the country.
“If he is subjected to any Chinese legal process, it will be within a
system that is politicized, corrupt, nonaccountable, and marked by the complete
absence of due process. The international community needs to act
immediately to protect him and demand respect for his refugee status.”
Uyghurs say they have long suffered ethnic discrimination, oppressive religious
controls, and continued poverty and joblessness despite China's ambitious plans
to develop its vast northwestern frontier.
Xinjiang is a vast strategically crucial desert territory that borders Russia,
Mongolia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, and Pakistan.
The region has abundant oil reserves and is China's largest natural
gas-producing region.
Reported by Shohret Hoshur for RFA’s Uyghur service. Translated by
Shohret Hoshur. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/uyghur/repatriation-05262011192244.html
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