Baltimore Sun Sunday

Uighurs in Turkey still fear China

Legislator­s: Ethnic group being sold out to acquire vaccines

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BEIJING — Abdullah Metseydi, a Uighur in Turkey, was readying for bed last month when he heard commotion, then pounding on the door.

A dozen or more police officers poured in, many bearing guns and wearing the camouflage of Turkey’s anti-terror force. They asked if Metseydi had participat­ed in any movements against China and threatened to deport him and his wife. They took him to a deportatio­n facility, where he now sits at the center of a brewing political controvers­y.

Opposition legislator­s in Turkey are accusing Ankara’s leaders of secretly selling out Uighurs to China in exchange for coronaviru­s vaccines. Tens of millions of vials of promised Chinese vaccines have not yet been delivered. Meanwhile, in recent months, Turkish police have raided and detained around 50 Uighurs in deportatio­n centers, lawyers say — a sharp uptick from last year.

Although no hard evidence has yet emerged for a quid pro quo, these legislator­s and the Uighurs fear Beijing is using the vaccines as leverage to win passage of an extraditio­n treaty. The treaty was signed years ago but suddenly ratified by China in December, and could come before Turkish lawmakers this month.

Uighurs say the bill, once law, could bring their ultimate life-threatenin­g nightmare: Deportatio­n back to a country they fled to avoid mass detention. More than a million Uighurs and other largely Muslim minorities have been swept into prisons and detention camps in China, in what China calls an anti-terrorism measure but the United States has declared a genocide.

Suspicions of a deal emerged when the first shipment of Chinese vaccines was held up for weeks in December. Officials blamed permit issues.

But even now, Yildirim Kaya, a legislator from Turkey’s main opposition party, said that China has delivered only a third of the 30 million doses it promised by the end of January. Turkey is largely reliant on China’s Sinovac vaccine to immunize its population against the virus, which has infected more than 2.5 million and caused nearly 27,000 deaths.

“Such a delay is not normal. We have paid for these vaccines,” Kaya said. “Is China blackmaili­ng Turkey?”

Kaya said he’s formally asked the Turkish government about pressure from China but has not yet received a response.

Both Turkish and Chinese authoritie­s insist that the extraditio­n bill isn’t meant to target Uighurs for deportatio­n. Chinese state media called such concerns “smearing,” and Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Wang Wenbin denied any connection between vaccines and the treaty.

“I think your speculatio­n is unfounded,” Wang said Thursday.

Though very few have actually been deported for now, the recent detentions have sent a chill through Turkey’s Uighur community, estimated to be about 50,000. And in recent weeks, the Turkish ambassador in Beijing has praised China’s vaccines while adding that Ankara values “judicial cooperatio­n” with China — code, many Uighurs fear, for a possible crackdown.

In the past, a small number of Uighurs have traveled to Syria to train with militants. But most Uighurs in Turkey shun jihadis and worry they are hurting the Uighur cause. Lawyers representi­ng the detained Uighurs say that in most cases, the Turkish police have no evidence of links to terror groups.

Ankara law professor Ilyas Dogan believes the detentions are politicall­y motivated.

“They have no concrete evidence,” said Dogan, who is representi­ng six Uighurs now in deportatio­n centers, including Metseydi. “They’re not being serious.”

Because of shared cultural ties, Turkey has long been a safe haven for the Uighurs, a Turkic group native to China’s far west Xinjiang region. Turkish President Recep Erdogan denounced China’s treatment of the

Uighurs as “genocide” over a decade ago.

That all changed with an attempted coup in Turkey in 2016, which prompted a mass purge and alienated Erdogan from Western government­s. Waiting to fill the void was China, which is loaning and investing billions in Turkey.

China also began requesting the extraditio­n of many more Uighurs from Turkey. In one leaked 2016 extraditio­n request first reported by Axios and obtained independen­tly by Associated Press, Chinese officials asked for the extraditio­n of a Uighur former cellphone vendor, accusing him of promoting the Islamic State terror group online. The vendor was arrested but eventually released and cleared of charges.

Abdurehim Parac, a Uighur poet detained twice in the past few years, said even detention in Turkey was “hotel-like” compared to the “hellish” conditions he was subjected to during three years in Chinese prison. Imim was eventually released after a judge cleared his name. But he has difficulty sleeping at night out of fear that the extraditio­n bill might be ratified, and called the pressure “unbearable.”

“Death awaits me in China,” he said.

Rising fears are already prompting an influx of Uighurs moving to Germany, the Netherland­s, and other European countries. Some are so desperate they’re even sneaking across borders illegally, said Ali Kutad, who fled China for Turkey in 2016.

“Turkey is our second homeland,” Kutad said. “We’re really afraid.”

 ?? EMRAH GUREL/AP ?? Ahmed Hasim, a member of the Uighur ethnic group, waits for customers Tuesday in his grocery store in Istanbul, Turkey.
EMRAH GUREL/AP Ahmed Hasim, a member of the Uighur ethnic group, waits for customers Tuesday in his grocery store in Istanbul, Turkey.

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