
In
a speech delivered in Prague on June 5 at a
conference on democracy and security, President
George W. Bush praised Uyghur American Association
president and Nobel Peace Prize nominee Rebiya
Kadeer,citing her as an individual who has struggled
for freedom, democracy and human rights in the face
of tyranny. President and Mrs. Bush also met
privately with Ms. Kadeer at the conference.
In his speech, President Bush voiced support for the
"forces of conscience that undermine repressive
societies," saying "people living in tyranny need to
know they are not forgotten." He called on "every
nation that stifles dissent to end its repression,
trust its people, and grant its citizens the freedom
they deserve." He expressed strong reservations
about China's policy of carrying out economic
reforms without opening its political system.
The President spoke about dissidents and democratic
activists around the world whose calls for greater
human rights have been brutally repressed, including
Ms. Kadeer, as well as Alexander Kozulin of Belarus,
Aung San Suu Kyi of Burma, Oscar Elias Biscet of
Cuba, Father Nguyen Van Ly of Vietnam, and Ayman
Nour of Egypt. He specifically criticized the
imprisonment of Ms. Kadeer's two sons in China.
"Another dissident I will meet with here is Rebiya
Kadeer of China,whose sons have been jailed in what
we believe is an act of retaliation for her human
rights activities. The talent of men and women like
Rebiya is the greatest resource of their nations --
far more valuable than the weapons of their army or
oil under the ground. So America calls on every
nation that stifles dissent to end its repression,
trust its people, and grant its citizens the freedom
they deserve."
Ablikim Abdureyim, one of Ms. Kadeer's sons, was
sentenced to nine years in prison on charges of "secessionism"
in April, after a trial in which he was not provided
with legal representation. In November of last year,
Alim Abdureyim, Ms. Kadeer's youngest son, was
sentenced to seven years in prison on charges of tax
evasion. Both sons have reportedly been subjected to
torture and other physical abuse. The Uyghur
American Association calls upon the government of
the People's Republic of China to release Ablikim
and Alim immediately.
Ms. Kadeer has been working to improve human rights
conditions in East Turkistan (also known as Xinjiang
Uyghur Autonomous Region) since her release from a
Chinese prison in March 2005. She was imprisoned in
1999 after attempting to meet with a group of U.S.
Congress staff members to talk about Uyghur human
rights issues, and originally fell into disfavor
with the central government after using her position
as a delegate to a national government body to call
for an end to the repression of Uyghurs in East
Turkistan.
The full text of President Bush's speech may be
found here:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2007/06/20070605-8.html
...