Archive for June 2nd, 2008

维族和汉族的笑话

Written by Uyghur News on Monday, June 2nd, 2008 in News-中文, Uighur related (Uyaq-Buyaqtin).

维族和汉族的笑话

一维族同志打传呼,汉族传呼小姐问:你呼多少?维族同志回答:三愣愣八愣愣五愣!小姐又问:你叫什么?维族回答:肉孜!小姐问:猪肉的肉吗?维族同志说:阿囊死给,羊肉的肉!

*************************************************
外人眼里的新疆
1、”你是新疆人啊?”
“是啊。”
“那太好了,下次我去拉萨旅游,就住你家了啊。”
“……没问题,不过我家离拉萨稍有点远。”
2、”那你们怎么来上学?”
“骑驴到北京后坐飞机.”
“那一定很久才到吧?
“习惯了,提前半年出发就行!”
“………………!
3、”你是新疆的?”
“YES”
“哇..好远啊….”
(沉默中……….)
“新疆解放没有?”
“没有,我们上课的时候都带着枪”
4、”你原来会说汉语~!”
“恩,来的时候在火车上刚学的”
” 你的很多小辫子呢?”
“为了上大学只好剪掉了!”
5、”在新疆,骑马的都是穷人干的事情,像我们考出来的,都是骑骆驼的 。然后新疆没有高考,考试都是比赛射箭,一公里以外摆个牌子,写上”清华”旁边放一个”北大” !射中哪个上哪个!”
“那要是都没射中呢?”
“拉到红旗拉普边防站站岗去”
“哇,新疆连大学生都要站岗啊?”
“这算什么,新疆还有大学生卖凉皮子呢!”
“什么叫凉皮子啊?”
“………………”
“怎么不回答我呢?”
“凉皮子是树上结的一种果实,味偏酸辣……”
“有机会我一定要去新疆摘些凉皮子尝

Celil, Guantanamo Bay and the rejected refugees

Written by Uyghur News on Monday, June 2nd, 2008 in News-English.

IMPRISONED CANADIAN: CHINA’S MUSLIM MINORITY

Celil, Guantanamo Bay and the rejected refugees

Ottawa got cold feet about taking Uyghurs

OMAR EL AKKAD

Article Link

June 2, 2008

OTTAWA — Languishing behind prison walls somewhere in China, Huseyin Celil may never know how much impact he has had on the continuing plight of a group of his brethren held in a controversial prison on the other side of the planet.

The Globe and Mail has learned that the Canadian government came very close to accepting as refugees a group of Uyghur prisoners from Guantanamo Bay - men who were captured by bounty hunters in Pakistan six years ago, handed over to American soldiers, shipped off to Guantanamo and then almost immediately found to have done nothing wrong.

But Ottawa pulled back at the last minute, in large part, sources say, because of fears of what would happen to Mr. Celil, also a member of China’s Uyghur minority, if the transfer went ahead - Beijing has lobbied furiously to keep any nation from accepting the Guantanamo Bay detainees.

Interviews with government and legal sources, as well as documents obtained under the Access to Information Act, show the political negotiations that went on behind the scenes, as the U.S. desperately tried to get rid of men it now admits pose no threat.

Those men might well be Canadian residents today if it weren’t for another imprisoned Canadian whose release Ottawa is unable to secure.

POLITICAL FAVOURS

In 2002, a few months after the U.S. invaded Afghanistan, bounty hunters across the region were rounding up anyone they could hand over to the American military, usually for a handsome sum - an arrangement the military frequently accepted.

Among those men were a group of almost two dozen Uyghur men captured in Pakistan. The Uyghurs are a Muslim minority group in northwest China. Since Sept. 11, 2001, Beijing has used the war on terrorism as leverage in its continuing crackdown on the Uyghurs, some of whom have fought fiercely for independence from China.

The men were handed over to the U.S. military for about $5,000 a head, and eventually flown to the newly established detention facility in Guantanamo Bay.

It quickly became clear to U.S. officials that, if the Uyghurs harboured hatred against any government, it was that of China, not the United States. The men denied allegations of wrongdoing, and it wasn’t long before then-secretary of state Colin Powell was looking for a country to take the prisoners.

“The U.S. recognized very early on that these men were captured by mistake,’ said J. Wells Dixon, an attorney with the New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights, who represents some of the Uyghurs.

Although some of the detainees were cleared for release from Guantanamo Bay as early as 2003, it was not until 2006 that any of them actually left the naval base.

The timing of the men’s release was coincidental at best. Some of the prisoners, who had earlier been declared “no longer enemy combatants,” had filed court cases arguing the U.S. could no longer detain them. A U.S. court of appeal was set to hear arguments in the case on May 8, 2006. Three days before the hearing was scheduled, the five men were released from the base and flown to Albania. The court case was dismissed, and Washington avoided a ruling on whether what was happening in Guantanamo was legal.

Albania, which has no Uyghur community to speak of, was far from an ideal location for the men. Indeed, the U.S. had quietly (and unsuccessfully) lobbied about 100 countries to take the prisoners. Among those countries was Canada, a place the prisoners’ lawyers had hoped would agree to take them in. Albania was the lone outlier among those countries, and not for purely benevolent reasons.

“It appears to us that they were sent to Albania because Albania owed the U.S. a political favour,” said Mr. Dixon. “Albania wants very much to become a part of the European Union. … As soon as [the Uyghurs] were sent to Albania, it was shortly thereafter that the U.S. announced support for Albania’s efforts to join the European Union.”

It is also believed that the U.S. paid millions of dollars as part of the transfer agreement.

But the factors were not the same with other countries. Many did not want to take men who were in any way associated with the controversial detention facility. Many questioned why Washington wouldn’t allow the men to settle in the U.S. (something that would have had serious political and legal implications on the already controversial Guantanamo Bay facility).

But perhaps the most significant factor in the widespread refusal to accept the men had to do with Beijing’s lobbying. The Chinese government made it clear that it considers any such transfers to be violations of international law, and wants the men instead sent to China. But the U.S. has refused to send the men back because of the likelihood they would be tortured. In an ironic twist, the U.S. was now put in a position where it had to protect men it once accused of heinous crimes from potentially heinous treatment.

Judging by how many nations refused to take the prisoners, China’s lobbying appears to have been at least partly successful. But in Ottawa, Beijing’s position carried even more weight.

CRACKING UNDER PRESSURE

On May 18, 2006, a U.S. delegation met with senior political staff at the Department of Foreign Affairs, Citizen and Immigration Canada, the Canada Border Services Agency, the Department of Justice and the Prime Minister’s Office. The purpose of the high-level meeting was to discuss the Uyghurs.

It was not the first time the U.S. had asked for Canada’s help. Washington had sent specific requests about the Uyghurs to Foreign Affairs, CIC and the Privy Council office in October, November and December of 2005.

Documents obtained under the Access to Information and Privacy Act show that Canadian officials at the May meeting indicated the prisoners would likely be inadmissible under Canadian immigration law, but did not make a firm decision.

“There has been no decision by the Government of Canada as to whether to formally discourage or encourage the US from making formal referrals for resettlement pursuant to the Canada-US Safe Third Country Agreement,” a briefing note reads.

Under the agreement, anyone seeking refugee protection must make a claim in the first country they arrive in - be it the U.S. or Canada - unless they qualify for an exception. The situation may be more complicated in the case of Guantanamo Bay, a place that Washington has gone to great lengths to treat as a separate entity from the U.S.

“[The Department of Foreign Affairs] will need to consider the bilateral and multilateral implications” of any transfer, the briefing note reads.

Government officials were instructed not to talk about the potential transfer. Officials were to say that privacy legislation prohibits them from discussing specific immigration or refugee applications, but that “Canada has an active immigration and refugee program. Individual resettlement requests are assessed on a case-by-case basis.”

Around the same time that Washington and Ottawa were discussing a potential transfer, Mr. Celil was travelling to Uzbekistan on his newly acquired Canadian passport to visit his wife’s family. While applying for a visa extension in March, he was arrested. On June 26, despite initially denying any knowledge of the case, Uzbek officials informed their Canadian counterparts that Mr. Celil had been handed off to Beijing.

Almost immediately, Ottawa worked to release the detained Canadian, taking his case up at the highest level with even the Prime Minister involved. Among the myriad consular cases, this one was a priority, and that meant stopping anything that could make Mr. Celil’s situation worse. The transfer of Uyghurs from Guantanamo Bay, once a very real possibility, was pulled off the table.

“My impression is that there was reluctance on the part of the Canadian government to do anything to further complicate their discussions with the Chinese government about Huseyin Celil,” Mr. Dixon said. “In other words, that there was concern that if Canada accepted the Uyghur prisoners from Gitmo that that would anger the Chinese and it would potentially complicate efforts by the Canadian government to get Huseyin Celil released.”

A source in Ottawa confirmed that Canada came very close to accepting the Uyghur prisoners, but ultimately backed off, in large part because of fears about how such a move would affect Mr. Celil’s condition in China.

But if the refusal to accept the Uyghurs as refugees was meant to make the Celil negotiations go more smoothly, it failed. In April of 2007, Mr. Celil was sentenced to life in prison for terrorism offences - offences he strongly denies and Canadian officials said they’ve seen no evidence of. Mr. Celil has had no access to Canadian consular officials. Beijing refuses to accept his Canadian citizenship.

NOWHERE TO TURN

Today, both Mr. Celil and the Guantanamo Bay Uyghurs have little reason to be optimistic. Both remain in controversial prisons. Despite being declared a non-threat, the Uyghurs are kept in Camp Six, the highest-security detention facility in Guantanamo, where inmates are isolated for 22 hours a day. Mr. Celil is believed to be in a prison in northwest China, but his family is no longer certain of his exact location.

In a way, both governments responsible for the detention of the Uyghurs and Mr. Celil have not changed their positions. Beijing has made it clear that it will not budge in Mr. Celil’s case. And fearing that further protest may affect other aspects of the China-Canada relationship, Ottawa has toned down its efforts to bring the imprisoned Canadian home.

Washington, too, has not changed its position. The U.S. continues to lobby its allies to take the Uyghurs, who make up a significant portion of the 70 or so men that the U.S. deems not a security threat. Since all three remaining presidential candidates have indicated their desire to close the facility, the U.S. is desperate to get as many of those 70 as it can out of Guantanamo Bay.

“My impression is that if Canada announced that it would take the Uyghurs on Monday, they’d be in Canada on Friday,” Mr. Dixon said.

秦刚:奉劝美方停止用民主人权问题干涉别国内政

Written by Uyghur News on Monday, June 2nd, 2008 in News-中文.

秦刚:奉劝美方停止用民主人权问题干涉别国内政
2008年06月02日 15:35 来源:中国新闻网 发表评论

中新社北京六月二日电 中国外交部发言人秦刚二日就美国务院发表的年度“促进自由和民主国别报告”答记者问称,“我们奉劝美方多关注一下自身存在的种种人权问题,停止利用民主人权问题干涉别国内政,多做有利于增进中美互信和两国关系发展的事。”

有记者问,美国国务院日前发表“二00八年度促进自由和民主国别报告”,批评中国人权状况。请问中方对此有何评论?

秦刚回答称,中国政府坚持以人为本、执政为民。中国政府在发展民主、加强法治、维护和促进中国各族人民的人权和自由方面所取得的巨大成就是有目共睹的。美国务院上述报告无视事实,对中国的民主人权状况妄加指责,这是毫无道理的。

East Turkestan: Senator Brown Speaks Out Over Detained Uyghurs

Written by Uyghur News on Monday, June 2nd, 2008 in News-Uyghur.

East Turkestan: Senator Brown Speaks Out Over Detained Uyghurs

Article Link

Sen. Sherrod Brown’s speech after introduction of S. RES. 574

22 May 2008

Congressional Record

Mr. BROWN: Mr. President, the Chinese people have endured an unspeakable tragedy, as we know, with the loss of tens of thousands in a major earthquake. Those numbers continue to grow. On the radio this morning [22 May 2008], I heard it looks like more than 50,000 Chinese people have died in one of the greatest tragedies of the last decade. My prayers are with the people of Sichuan Province and all those brave men and women who are there now providing support as volunteers, especially providing support to the Chinese people in Sichuan Province.

I wish to focus on something else in China. This isn’t the Chinese people, it is the actions of a few people at the top of the Chinese Government—actions we must confront. When I say “only a few people at the top,” the Chinese Government is called the People’s Republic of China for a reason. It is a Communist government, a very top-line hierarchical system, where a few people at the top enjoy so much of the benefits and so much of the power and they wield that so unfairly and immorally and, many times, against so many in their country.

For us to ignore the behavior of the Chinese Government, to dismiss that behavior, to minimize that behavior is a reprehensible act on our part.

In a little more than 3 months, the world will witness one of its great quadrennial events—the summer Olympic Games. The games have been billed as a way for the host, China, to reintroduce itself—a new China, if you will—to the international community. And China has pulled out all the stops: $38 billion in infrastructure improvements, including a brand new 91,000-seat stadium, 300 miles of new roads, and an entirely new terminal at Beijing’s International Airport, all because of the Olympic Games.

What China will not be highlighting is its human rights record. That is because it is abysmally disgraceful.

As China rolls out the red carpet to welcome hundreds of thousands of tourists and as Olympic-related media flock to Beijing to watch the events, no one will be allowed to go to Tibet, no one will be allowed to go to the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, no one will be allowed to see the hundreds of political prisons, no one will be allowed to visit the areas of China where hundreds of millions live in abject poverty.

Last year, Amnesty International—a no more respected and fairminded group in the world—said of China:

“An increased number of . . . journalists were harassed, detained, and jailed. Thousands of people who pursued their faith outside officially sanctioned churches were subjected to harassment and many to detention and imprisonment. Thousands of people were sentenced to death or executed. Migrants from rural areas were deprived of basic rights.”

The Presiding officer, from the State of Rhode Island, has talked passionately about the freedom of the press and journalism in countries where we have the kind of relationship we have with China and how important it is. Others in this body have talked about human rights and labor rights, and now China has violated those values we hold dear and that international organizations that serve all of the world hold so dear.

Beijing will continue to attempt to paint its repressive regime during the Olympics in the best light possible, as we have seen in the last month [April 2008] with the unnerving events in Tibet. The repression in Tibet, a region similar in its treatment by the government as the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, is nothing new. For almost 60 years, Tibetans have survived under Beijing repression. Tibet was swallowed up by China in 1950. The Uyghur Autonomous Region was swallowed up by China the year before.

China’s policy is straightforward: Declare war on human rights, bring in native Chinese for the best jobs, eradicate the indigenous culture, the language, the spiritual center, disperse the population. It seems to have worked for China’s interest every time.

China’s policies keep import prices low by allowing inhumane treatment of workers; slave wages, and unsafe working conditions have become all too common.

China, the Communist regime, has become China, the world’s largest one-company town where workers are interchangeable, replaceable parts and where members of the Communist Party are its shareholders.

The United States as purportedly the world leader in human rights—we talk about exporting democracy, we brag about our values, yet our business is with encouragement and incentives—unbelievably enough, sometimes from our own Government—even though we say we are the world leader in human rights. The United States should not be endorsing in any way the brutal and horrific policies of the Chinese Government. Again, the United States, by our actions by the Government and by business do not seem so interested oftentimes in human rights in China in spite of what we say. We should not be sacrificing our moral compass at the altar of the dollar. We do that way too often.

I met with Rabiya Kadeer, the Uyghur dissident leader and head of the Uyghur American Association. She told me of her time in prison for political advocacy on behalf of her people. She spent 6 long years in prison, arrested in 1999 on her way to a meeting with foreign activists and leaders. She told me of her children who either live in fear or live in prison because of her advocacy on behalf of basic freedoms for the 12 or 13 million Uyghur people. She told me of her exile. She is not allowed to return to her native country.

We need the strength to stand up to rather than apologize for China’s brutal regime. This has been the systematic policy of a highly efficient and powerful central government.

The Chinese Uyghurs have long fought for more autonomy from Beijing and greater freedom to practice their Muslim religion.

This is not a new policy. We have seen the same in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region where ethnic Uyghur people have been systematically relocated and repressed. Their Turkic language is prohibited, their women are placed into forced labor, especially young women taken out of the Autonomous Region to other parts of China, in many cases to be slave labor, forced labor, in other cases to be sex slaves, and their political leaders are jailed. Yet we allow China into the World Health Organization, the World Trade Organization, and made them a preferred trading partner.

Communities across America feel the reverberations of this policy. Not only does it blacken our name as a country when China violates every kind of human rights we care about, but then it affects our country in so many other ways.

We have lost more than 3 million manufacturing jobs across this country since President Bush has been President. Many of these jobs have been eliminated because of government-subsidized imports from China, because of cheating on currency rules, and because of direct off shoring to countries such as China.

China gives their manufacturers that unfair competitive advantage by manipulating its currency and providing massive subsidies to its industry. We know all that. American companies have been complicit by hiring Chinese subcontractors and forcing those subcontractors to continue to cut costs, meaning contaminated vitamins, contaminated pharmaceuticals, and dangerous toxic lead-based paint on toys.

I am submitting a resolution today calling on the Chinese to free the Kadeer children, free the Uyghur political prisoners, and end the political, religious, and ethnic repression in that part of China.

I ask my colleagues to take a look at this resolution, to meet with Ms. Kadeer and to join me in working to bring the atrocities against the Uyghur people to an end. Instead of welcoming China, celebrating China, and trading with China on their terms, as we all talk about the great quadrennial events of the international Olympic Games, we should be helping China’s repressed. We should not indulge China its abuses. It dishonors our own values.

Chinese Court Cites ‘Insufficient Evidence’ in Christian’s Trial

Case of Alimjan Yimit, charged with unspecified crimes, is returned to state prosecutors.
Article link

By Sarah Page

Court officials in Xinjiang, China returned the case of Uyghur Christian Alimjan Yimit, charged with unspecified crimes, to state prosecutors this week citing “insufficient evidence.”

Police arrested Alimjan on January 12 for “endangering national security” but refused to explain the charges to his family.

The court allowed Alimjan’s two lawyers to be present on Tuesday (May 27) but banned Alimjan’s wife Gulnur from entering the courtroom due to the “sensitivity” of the case.

According to a China Aid Association (CAA) report, the trial began at 10 a.m. and finished at 7:30 p.m., with a three-hour recess in the afternoon. After deliberations the court returned the case to state prosecutors citing “insufficient evidence” against Alimjan.

The trial, originally scheduled for April, was delayed while Han Chinese lawyers had court documents – including interrogation records from the Xinjiang State Security Bureau (SSB) – translated from Uyghur into Chinese, CAA reported on May 8.

Alimjan’s name appears as Alimujiang Yimiti in Chinese documents.

During Alimjan’s employment with two foreign-owned companies, officials from the SSB regularly called him in for interrogation, forbidding him to discuss the questioning with anyone.

Last September, officials closed the business Alimjan worked for and accused him of using it as a cover for “preaching Christianity among people of Uyghur ethnicity.”

Alimjan, once a Muslim, converted to Christianity more than 10 years ago and became active in the growing Uyghur church. Friends believe his faith is the real reason for his arrest.

Wife Proclaims Innocence

Gulnur has consistently proclaimed her husband’s innocence. She recently told CAA staff that as an agricultural worker, Alimjan had no access to information affecting national security and therefore could not be guilty of leaking or abusing such information.

Gulnur traveled from the provincial capital Urumqi to the trial venue in Kashgar – a distance of some 915 miles (1,474 kilometers) – or 24 hours’ travel by desert highway, but was unable to attend the trial.

She has not seen her husband for five months, according to one Compass source who requested anonymity. One of Alimjan’s lawyers, however, assured her that Alimjan was coping well with his imprisonment.

The same source said Gulnur was extremely concerned for her husband as state officials had reportedly threatened execution or up to six years in prison for Alimjan.

Local sources were adamant that Alimjan was neither a separatist nor a terrorist but had consistently affirmed his loyalty to the Chinese government. (See Compass Direct News, “Unrest in China Raises Fears of Execution of Christian,” April 9.)

Another Uyghur Christian, Osman Imin, arrested on November 19, 2007, remains in detention, accused of “leaking state secrets.” In Chinese documents, Osman’s name appears as Wusiman Yaming.

Compass has confirmed that a third Uyghur believer arrested earlier this year also remains in detention in Xinjiang.



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