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Home›China›Uighur scholar Tohti indicted for separatism

Uighur scholar Tohti indicted for separatism

By -
July 31, 2014
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Ilham Tohti

Ilham Tohti

An outspoken Chinese minority scholar was indicted on separatism charges yesterday amid a renewed flare-up of bloody anti-government violence in the country’s far west.
The prosecutor’s office in the Xinjiang regional capital of Urumqi announced the indictment of economics professor Ilham Tohti in a brief online statement.
Tohti was detained in mid-January and later accused of separatism. Through his lawyer, he has firmly rejected accusations of advocating Xinjiang’s independence from China. Such charges almost always end in conviction and a sentence of up to several years in prison.
Tohti was originally accused of recruiting followers through a website he founded to allegedly manufacture rumors, distort and play-up incidents, spread separatist thoughts, incite ethnic hatred and engage in separatist activities.
He is also accused of telling his students that minority Uighurs should emulate Chinese who violently resisted Japanese invaders in World War II, and of teaching them to hate China and seek to overthrow the government.
Calls to Tohti’s lawyer, Li Fangping, rang unanswered yesterday night.
Tohti is widely considered a moderate but vocal advocate of equal rights for the Turkic Uighur ethnic minority in Xinjiang. Many Uighurs say they face repressive cultural and religious policies along with economic disenfranchisement in their homeland.
Such sentiments are seen as contributing to a recent increase in violence in Xinjiang blamed on Uighur militants that has also spread to Beijing and the western province of Yunnan.
On Monday, the government said rampaging militants armed with knives and axes killed or injured dozens of people in Shache county near the city of Kashgar in Xinjiang’s far west. Official reports said police killed dozens of the assailants, who reportedly first attacked police and government offices before turning on civilians. More details haven’t been released and the precise death toll remains unknown.
China called the incident a “premeditated terror attack,” and said further investigations were underway. If dozens were indeed killed, it would be the bloodiest single outbreak of violence since ethnic riots in Urumqi in 2009 left nearly 200 dead, according to the government.
The official account of Monday’s incident has been disputed by a Uighur group based in the U.S., where many Uighurs live.
The Uyghur American Association said police killed protesters angered by heavy-handed security measures taken during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan which ended this week.
Neither version could be independently confirmed, and calls to police stations and government offices in the area rang unanswered yesterday. A telephone operator in Shache said mobile communications and the Internet were being cut off, but declined to give details or her name.
Obtaining details of violence in the remote region is usually impossible and authorities routinely prevent foreign journalists from working freely in the area.
While some of the recent violent attacks have shown an increased level of sophistication and planning, most have relied on crude weaponry such as swords, bombs and homemade explosives.
China’s government says the militants have ties to overseas Islamic terror groups, although it has provided little evidence to back up its claim.
Also known as Yarkant, Shache is near the border with the unstable Central Asian states, about 3,500 kilometers west of Beijing. AP

Christopher Bodeen, Beijing
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