CHINA JAILS UYGHUR JOURNALIST FOR "SEPARATISM"
WASHINGTON, July 28, 2004—A court in the Muslim Uyghur
region of Xinjiang in northwest China has jailed a
journalist who reported on political tensions there
for separatist activities and leaking state secrets
overseas, Ra's Uyghur service reports.
Abdulghani Memetemin, 40, was handed a nine-year jail
term by the Intermediate People's Court in the
Xinjiang city of Kashgar, according to a copy of the
court judgement sent to RFA.
"Abdulghani Memetemin is accused of threatening the
integrity of the state by separatist means, violating
state secrets and sending them outside the country,"
the Kashgar court judgement said.
The judgement listed 18 counts of the charges against
the former reporter for the Germany-based East
Turkistan Information Center (ETIC), who was forced to
work secretly and had warned ETIC that he was likely
to be caught.
They included such news reports as the detention of a
well-known Muslim cleric, discrimination against
Uyghurs for adhering to Islamic religious practices by
their employers, and an undercover trip to Central
Asian countries by 20 Chinese State Security officers
disguised as businessmen, it said.
The judgement also singled out Abdulghani Memetemin's
translations into Chinese of key official speeches and
news about oppression of Uyghurs, an issue of possibly
even greater sensitivity for Beijing than the
reporting of the pro-independence viewpoint overseas.
While the court found Abdulghani Memetemin guilty of
violating secret state information, it said he could
not be said to have threatened the integrity of the
state. The judgement cited his helpful attitude and
acceptance of the charges against him. Memetemin
represented himself during the proceedings. His
argument — that he had no separatist intentions &mdsah;
was dismissed, according to the judgment.
It said the accused's assertion: "I admitted all my
crimes and ask the court to consider this" was taken
into consideration. But ETIC said he had been tortured
at the hands of Chinese security officials.
"To claim that [Abdulghani Memetemin] disclosed the
nation's secrets to people overseas and attempted to
"split" the country is total slander," the East
Turkistan Information Center (ETIC) said in a recent
e-mail to Amnesty International forwarded to RFA's
Uyghur service. "He never attended any political
activities."
"According to our information, since he was arrested,
he was inhumanly tortured by the Chinese government
and his family members were banned from visiting him,"
ETIC said, calling for Abdulghani Memetemin's release.
The judgement concluded: "The crimes of the accused
Abdulghani Memetemin are grave and the damage to the
state secrecy is great and requires therefore a heavy
punishment." Memetemin was sentenced to nine years in
prison and "deprivation of political rights" for three
years.
The term of punishment ends in July 2011.
Human rights groups and Western governments routinely
criticize China for its heavy-handed treatment of the
Uyghur population in Xinjiang.
Beijing has backed the U.S.-led war on terror, and
called for international support for its campaign
against Uyghur separatists, whom it has branded
terrorists.
China says Uyghurs seeking an independent Islamic
state have killed 162 people and injured 440 others.
Uyghurs constitute a distinct, Turkic-speaking, Muslim
minority in northwestern China and Central Asia. They
declared a short-lived East Turkestan Republic in
Xinjiang in the late 1940s, but have remained under
Beijing's control since 1949.
According to a Chinese Government white paper, in 1998
Xinjiang comprised 8 million Uyghurs, 2.5 million
other ethnic minorities, and 6.4 million Han
Chinese-up from 300,000 Han in 1949. Most Uyghurs are
poor farmers, and at least 25 percent are illiterate.
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