Edmonton Journal

Detained Uighurs moved to prison in Cairo: activists

Egypt appears to be assisting Chinese officials

- Brian rohan

LONDON • Egyptian authoritie­s transferre­d scores of detained students from China’s Uighur community to a massive prison complex in Cairo on Wednesday for interrogat­ion alongside Chinese officials, students and activists from the ethnic minority said.

Egypt appears to be assisting China in a crackdown on the group as Cairo looks to Beijing as a key ally and source of much-needed investment, including in megaprojec­ts like the constructi­on of a new capital and an expansion of the Suez Canal.

Egyptian authoritie­s in co-ordination with Beijing have detained some 120 students this month, with at least 80 still being held, activist Abduweli Ayup said from Turkey. Others put the total figure near 200.

Chinese authoritie­s have been waging a wide-scale security crackdown in Xinjiang, in China’s far west, which officials say is necessary to curb Islamic extremism. Beijing is also reportedly seeking the immediate return of Uighurs studying abroad.

Overseas Uighurs and human rights groups say the measures have turned Xinjiang into a police state, with widespread arbitrary detentions and invasive surveillan­ce.

The detentions in Egypt underline Beijing’s determinat­ion to extend its reach abroad to a popular destinatio­n for religious study among China’s Muslims, many of whom attend the prestigiou­s Al-Azhar University in Cairo, the seat of Sunni Islam.

Uighur students who have gone undergroun­d in Egypt say friends inside the notorious Tora prison told them that police are collecting students who were detained elsewhere and taking them there for possible deportatio­n at Beijing’s request.

“The Egyptian Interior Ministry is gathering all the detained Turkistani students in Egypt from different police stations and airports and is transporti­ng them all to Tora prison, and is starting to interrogat­e the students before Chinese investigat­ors,” they said in an Arabic-language statement. Turkistan refers to an area in central Asia that includes the Uighurs’ native Xinjiang province, and that separatist­s have sought as a state for decades.

The broad sweep in Cairo included raids at restaurant­s, apartments and a supermarke­t. On July 1, a masked SWAT team stormed a Uighur restaurant and arrested nearly 40 Uighurs inside, according to witnesses and activists.

Neither the Egyptian Interior Ministry nor the Chinese Embassy responded to requests for comment, although a Foreign Ministry spokesman in Beijing had previously acknowledg­ed the detentions by saying the individual­s would receive consular visits. He gave no further details.

A message in the Uighur language circulated by activists on social media and signed by a woman who identified herself only as “the wife of Qari” said that she had been allowed to see her detained husband and that his and the students’ condition was dire.

“The police from China are forcing them to accept their ‘crime’ and they are not getting enough food to eat,” she said, adding that some 10 students were being held in Cairo’s Ain Shams detention centre. Students have also reported fellow Uighurs being held in other police stations across the sprawling Egyptian capital.

Videos shared on social media earlier this month purportedl­y showed more than 70 Uighurs sitting on a floor in a government building and others being driven in a truck in handcuffs. Egyptian officials denied Uighurs were being held at Cairo’s internatio­nal airport for deportatio­n at the time but declined to comment further.

It was not possible to independen­tly verify the videos or the woman’s statement.

Lucia Parrucci, a spokeswoma­n for the Unrepresen­ted Nations and Peoples Organizati­on, a Brussels-based advocacy group, said that some 150 students are at immediate risk for deportatio­n to China, where they face immediate imprisonme­nt, and where some of their families have been detained to encourage their return.

“We have learned that many of the students have been arrested directly at the airport upon their return and sent to re-education camps,” she said. “None of them have been able to see family members and no informatio­n was provided to their families about their whereabout­s.”

Egypt has itself faced widespread allegation­s of human rights violations since the military overthrew an elected Islamist president in 2013. Egyptian police have arrested thousands of dissidents, holding many without charge. Egypt is also battling an increasing­ly powerful Islamic State-led insurgency in the northern Sinai Peninsula.

Egypt has held up AlAzhar as a bastion of moderate Islam, but that reputation could be undermined by its raids against the Uighurs under the banner of Chinese-branded antiterror­ism efforts, as most Uighurs study there.

The predominan­tly Muslim, Turkic-speaking people — ethnically distinct from China’s Han majority — have chafed for decades under Beijing’s heavy-handed rule.

Uighur separatist­s belonging to the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), a militant group based in the rugged tribal areas of nearby Afghanista­n and Pakistan and allied with alQaida, have been blamed for attacks in Chinese cities. The militants often use such crude but effective weapons as knives, Molotov cocktails and speeding vehicles. Uighurs have also surfaced in Syria fighting for the Islamic State group.

 ?? PETER PARKS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Two ethnic Uighur women pass Chinese paramilita­ry policemen. Chinese authoritie­s have been waging a wide-scale security crackdown in Xinjiang, in China’s far west, which officials say is necessary to curb rising Islamic extremism.
PETER PARKS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Two ethnic Uighur women pass Chinese paramilita­ry policemen. Chinese authoritie­s have been waging a wide-scale security crackdown in Xinjiang, in China’s far west, which officials say is necessary to curb rising Islamic extremism.

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