Outspoken Uyghur Economist Presumed Detained After Urumqi Clashes
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HONG KONG-An outspoken economist from China's Uyghur ethnic minority,
whose blog was cited for allegedly instigating deadly ethnic clashes in
Xinjiang, has gone silent and his whereabouts are unknown after he
reported police had summoned him from his Beijing home, Radio Free Asia
(RFA) reports.
"Police have been watching my home for two days now," Ilham Tohti, an
economics professor at the Central Nationalities University in Beijing,
said July 7 in a telephone interview, two days after deadly clashes in
the northwestern city of Urumqi killed at least 156 people.
"They are calling me now, and I have to go. I may be out of touch for
some time," he told RFA's Uyghur service.
"I wasn't involved in anything, but I am not safe. The police are
calling me," Tohti said, and then hung up. Subsequent phone calls rang
unanswered.
On July 6, he told RFA's Cantonese service that he had gathered
information on the clashes but wouldn't release it because the timing
was too sensitive.
Uyghur Online publishes in Chinese and Uyghur and is seen as a moderate,
intellectual Web site addressing social issues. Authorities have closed
it on several previous occasions.
Tohti's blog, Uyghur Online, was specifically targeted in a July 5
speech by the governor of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR),
Nur Bekri, as an instigator of the clashes, along with exiled Uyghur
leader Rebiya Kadeer.
Tohti's last blog entry, published through a U.S. server at 10:52 a.m.
Beijing time July 7 and now blocked inside China, reads:
"As the editor of Uyghur Online, I want only to tell Nur Bekri, 'You are
right, everything you say is right, because you will decide everything.
I have already offended too many powerful people, including yourself and
others whom I don't want to and don't dare to offend. But right or
wrong, there will be justice."
"I always tell myself [to be] cool and calm and make rational analyses.
Going to court to resolve disputes is the fairest course of action in a
lawful society. I have my own lawyer. When my trial comes up, don't
appoint a lawyer for me. I will refuse any court-appointed lawyer."
"Even if we say that Uyghur Online and outsiders stirred thing
up-stirred what up? People can think for themselves. If everything were
working so well, why did so many people suddenly come out and riot? I
think after this event the central government and the local government
should give this some thought."
The clashes on Sunday in Urumqi, the XUAR capital, flared between Han
Chinese and Uyghurs following attacks on Uyghur migrant workers at a
factory in the southern province of Guangdong last month. Official media
said 156 people died in riots Sunday. The ethnicity of the dead was not
specified.
Online photos of corpses sparked calls for revenge, and thousands of
armed Han Chinese poured onto Urumqi's streets Tuesday, trying to break
through police lines into Uyghur neighborhoods.
Earlier detentions
Tohti has said he was interrogated repeatedly and accused of separatism
after he spoke out in March against Chinese policies in Xinjiang,
particularly the disproportionately high unemployment there among
Uyghurs, compared with Han Chinese.
He has called on authorities to ease curbs on free expression and foster
greater economic opportunity for Uyghurs in their native Xinjiang
region, where poverty and joblessness are commonplace.
"There are visible changes in China," he said in an interview with RFA's
Uyghur service in May. "But in terms of freedom and democracy,
Xinjiang's situation is the worst of the worst, compared with other
regions of China.
"What I have encountered at this time is typical. My Web site was shut
down without notice. I was interrogated many times and threatened. I am
a legal Beijing resident, and by law I should not be interrogated by
Xinjiang police officials, but it has happened."
"This shows how long the local authorities' reach is. They accused me of
separatism," he said. "But is demanding implementation of the autonomy
law separatism?"
China's 1984 Regional Ethnic Autonomy Law is the main legal framework
for managing the affairs of China's ethnic minorities. It promises a
high degree of autonomy for minority groups, but critics say its
implementation in many areas has been weak.
"There is no major problem with the main points of the central
government's policy," Tohti said.
His goal, he said, is "equal opportunity and equal development in
Xinjiang, equal with other provincial regions of China-and equal
opportunity and equal development between the Uyghur people and the Han
Chinese immigrants in Xinjiang."
Slammed governor
In an interview in March, Tohti also sharply criticized the governor of
Xinjiang, Nur Bekri, as incompetent.
Tohti, who said he feared for his own safety, was speaking as the
National People's Congress, China's annual session of parliament, met in
Beijing, with Bekri warning of a "more fierce struggle" against
separatist unrest in the region.
"My message to the Xinjiang government is, 'You should know that there
is no peace without equal development between Han immigrants and native
Uyghurs in Xinjiang. Similarly, there is no stability in the Uyghur
region without freedom of speech.'"
"My message to the central government is, 'Don't listen only to what the
local government officials in Xinjiang say-listen to the people. Don't
just make decisions based on government research-also look at
independent research. This will be very helpful for protecting the unity
of the nation, and the long-term prosperity of the country.'"
According to his official biography, Tohti was born in Atush, Xinjiang,
on Oct. 25, 1969. He graduated from the Northeast Normal University and
the Economics School at the Central Nationalities University in Beijing.
Original reporting by Shohret Hoshur for RFA's Uyghur service. Uyghur
service director: Dolkun Kamberi. Additional reporting by Gregory Ho for
RFA's Cantonese service. Cantonese service director: Shiny Li. Written
and produced in English by Sarah Jackson-Han.
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