US to push China to release of prominent Uighur Rebiya Kadeer
Thu Jan 27, 1:18 AM ET Asia
- AFP
WASHINGTON (AFP) -
The United States said it would push Beijing to release a prominent advocate of
women's and minority rights ailing in a Chinese prison.
Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia Randall Schriver said concerns
over 58-year-old Rebiya Kadeer, among the most prominent members of China's
Uighur ethnic group in the largely Muslim Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region,
would be raised with the Chinese government.
He was speaking at a special ceremony at the US Congress in honor of Kadeer
after she was named winner of the Norwegian Rafto prize, which each year goes to
a human rights advocate.
Schriver said Kadeer's case and other human rights questions would remain on the
agenda with China because "the human face is important" in relations between the
two powers.
T. Kumar, Amnesty International's Washington-based advocacy director for Asia
and Pacific, said President George W. Bush (news - web sites) should give top
priority to Kadeer's case because she was arrested while on her way to meet with
a US Congressional staff delegation in August 1999.
"President Bush (news - web sites) and newly appointed Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice (news - web sites) owe this to her and should treat this as
their main case with China," he said.
Kadeer was charged a month after her arrest with "providing secret information
to foreigners" and ordered jailed for eight years after a secret trial.
Frank Wolf, co-chairman of the Congressional Human Rights Caucus, asked the US
envoy in Beijing to visit Kadeer, who reportedly is suffering from heart and
gall bladder ailments.
Kadeer has one and a half years more to serve her jail term, which was trimmed
by one year by the Chinese authorities in 2004.
The mother of 11 has been a symbol of struggle of the approximately eight
million Turkish-speaking and mainly Muslim Uighurs, who make up one of China's
largest ethnic minority groups.
"She is like the mother and the voice of the oppressed Uighurs," said Nury
Turkel, president of the Uighur American Association.
The Xinjiang Uighur region has been autonomous since 1955, but continues to be
the subject of major crackdowns by Chinese authorities.
Sidik Rouzi, Kadeer's husband and himself once a political prisoner in China and
now residing in the United States, and their daughter Akida Rouzi received the
Rafto Prize, named after Norwegian professor Thorolf Rafto who spent most of his
life fighting for human rights.
Source:
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/afp/20050127/wl_asia_afp/uschinarights_050127061858