Muscat Daily

Uighur author tells of imprisonme­nt and China attacks

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Dhaka, Bangladesh - A prominent Bangladesh­i cartoonist was granted bail on Wednesday as several hundred people staged more protests over the death of a fellow government critic also arrested under the country’s harsh internet laws.

Ahmed Kabir Kishore (42) was detained in May after he drew cartoons mocking a powerful businessma­n close to the government and has since developed major health problems, activists said.

Last week writer Mushtaq Ahmed, who was arrested together with Kishore, died in prison, sparking days of sometimes violent protests against Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s government.

They were both detained under Bangladesh’s Digital Security Act (DSA), which rights groups say is being used to silence and intimidate critics of the government in the country of 168 million people.

On Wednesday the High Court - after multiple refusals from lower courts - granted Kishore bail for six months ‘considerin­g his long detention’, deputy attorney general Md. Sarwar Hossain Bappi told AFP.

Kishore’s brother Ahsan Kabir alleged that the cartoonist had been tortured in police custody, and had an eardrum infection and an injured leg. “His diabetes has worsened in custody... We fear for his life. We fear his injured left leg could get gangrene and may have to be cut off,” Kabir told AFP.

Nearly 500 people protested on Wednesday, calling for justice for Ahmed and the scrapping of the digital laws.

Paris, France - Gulbahar Haitiwaji knew that China would not be happy about her book describing nearly three years of imprisonme­nt, brainwashi­ng and harassment at the hands of the authoritie­s simply because she is Uighur.

But the ferocity with which Beijing has lashed out at the 54 year old author exceeded her worst expectatio­ns.

Branded ‘a terrorist’, ‘a separatist’ and ‘a liar’ after publishing her book Survivor of the Chinese Gulag in France, Haitiwaji told AFP she was surprised that nothing seemed off-limits - even her personal life, which Chinese officials called ‘chaotic’.

The book, co-written with French journalist Rozenn Morgat and currently being translated into English, tells the story of her detention in her home region of Xinjiang, in northweste­rn China.

Haitiwaji had been living in France for a decade when her former employer, a Chinese oil company, asked her in November 2016 to return home to deal with some formalitie­s it said were linked to her pension rights.

Her husband had come to France first, as a political refugee to escape ethnic discrimina­tion.

Haitiwaji joined him four years later. She kept her Chinese passport to at times return home for holidays, and didn’t feel like a political refugee because she had ‘no interest in political work’.

She was suspicious of the call from the oil company but still decided to go, planning to stay for two weeks. She did not return for nearly three years.

Quickly deprived of her passport on arrival, she went through a series of traumatisi­ng experience­s, including prison, a re-education camp, interrogat­ions, indoctrina­tions lasting 11 hours per day, and punishment from unforgivin­g guards for any ‘mistake’ made.

Chained by the ankles, she suffered from hunger and fear, and was forced to sit through a mock trial at which she was sentenced to seven years of ‘re-education’.

She was also forced to sign fake confession­s which she says Beijing is now using as proof that she is lying about the whole experience.

“I’ve been telling only the truth,” she said. “I expected China to deny everything, which is why I gave the context of the confession­s in the book - how they made me repeat the same things day in and day out.”

“I just wanted to get out of there and anybody else would have done the same.”

After initially denying the existence of the Xinjiang camps, China later defended them as vocational training centres aimed at reducing the appeal of religious extremism.

Beijing insisted last week that its treatment of ethnic minorities there and in Tibet ‘stood out as shining examples of China’s human rights progress’.

But why, said Haitiwaji, would China need to ‘train’ a university graduate living in France?

While Haitiwaji was held in China, her oldest daughter, Gulihumar, took her case public in

Paris, talking to the press and to officials in the French foreign ministry.

Abruptly, her mother was released from the camp and moved to an apartment, still under surveillan­ce. Then, equally suddenly, she was freed.

“I think China made an error by coming after me and Uighurs living abroad,” she said. “They did us a favour, they made Uighurs famous.”

“I was never into politics, and I’m still not. I never did anything to harm China, and yet they locked me up and tortured me.”

“All I want is for those camps to close and to help make sure that happens. With help from the West we’ll get there,” she said.

The Chinese Embassy in France said there was no truth to any of Haitiwaji’s claims.

“She was never prosecuted, and the so-called ‘re-education’ doesn’t exist,” it said.

 ?? (AFP) ?? The book  Rescapee du Goulag Chinoisi (Survivor of the Chinese Gulag), written by Gulbahar Haitiwaji with journalist Rozenn Morgat
(AFP) The book Rescapee du Goulag Chinoisi (Survivor of the Chinese Gulag), written by Gulbahar Haitiwaji with journalist Rozenn Morgat

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