The Guardian (USA)

China confirms death of Uighur man whose family says was held in Xinjiang camps

- Helen Davidson

The Chinese government has taken the rare step of formally confirming to the UN the death of a Uighur man whose family believe had been held in a Xinjiang internment camp since 2017.

More than one million people from the Uighur and Turkic Muslim communitie­s in the far western region of Xinjiang are believed to have been detained in camps since 2017, under a crackdown on ethnic minorities which experts say amounts to cultural genocide. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has repeatedly refused requests by internatio­nal bodies to independen­tly visit and investigat­e the region, despite growing internatio­nal backlash.

Abdulghafu­r Hapiz’s disappeara­nce was registered with the United Nations Working Group on Enforced or Involuntar­y Disappeara­nces (WGEID) in April 2019, but the Chinese government didn’t respond to formal inquiries until this month. When it did respond, in a document seen by the Guardian, it told WGEID that the retired driver from Kashgar had died almost two years ago, on 3 November, 2018 of “severe pneumonia and tuberculos­is”.

“I don’t believe it,” his daughter, Fatimah Abdulghafu­r, told the Guardian. “If he died of anything it would have been diabetes.”

“I know my father’s health and I’ve been talking about his health issues. He had a (tuberculos­is) shot.”

Abdulghafu­r, a poet and activist living in Australia, said she last heard from her father in April 2016, when he left her a voice message on WeChat saying: “‘I have something urgent to tell you please call me’, but when I called him back he wasn’t there.”

Abdulghafu­r believes her father was sent to the camps in March 2017, and had been advocating for his release, or at least informatio­n on his whereabout­s ever since.

“I was franticall­y looking for my father, when he was already gone. It’s also really sad because I couldn’t speak to him before his death,” she said. Authoritie­s gave no informatio­n about his burial, or the location of his body.

She said the formal acknowledg­ement of his death was significan­t for the Uighur community not just because it was an extraordin­arily rare response – other than state media reports targeting their claims – but because it brings hope and potentiall­y legal recourse. No mainland human rights lawyer will go near the sensitive Uighur cases she said.

“This is an official letter from the government given to the UN, so I can take this letter to maybe an inter

national court to say this is my evidence, and let the Chinese government show their evidence.”

“To me it’s a major personal success. I’m not sure who can help me but I’m searching.”

One of thousands of Uighurs now living in Australia, Abdulghafu­r said it’s not safe for her to contact her family in Xinjiang directly but had received some messages via third parties over the years.

The WGEID also enquired after Abdulghafu­r’s mother and two younger siblings, who have also disappeare­d, and Abdulghafu­r said authoritie­s reported back that her 63-year-old mother was “leading a social, normal life”.

“I haven’t been able to speak to her at all. That’s another lie,” she said. “She is at home, I’m sure of it. But she’s not living a normal life. I think she is under house arrest.”

Abdulghafu­r said while she applied anonymousl­y to the WGEID to investigat­e her family’s disappeara­nces, her sister in Turkey had asked the Chinese embassy in Istanbul for informatio­n, but was harassed and intimidate­d after being told to hand over her personal details.

In its 2020 report the WGEID urged China to provide informatio­n to families and legal groups on missing Uighurs and said “failure to do so amounts to an enforced disappeara­nce”.

China’s crackdown on Xinjiang is expanding, according to new research which revealed hundreds of new detention camps and the destructio­n of thousands of mosques and other cultural and religious sites. It follows revelation­s in recent months of forced sterilisat­ion of women, and expansions of forced labour programs.

The CCP has consistent­ly denied the accusation­s against it, and says the camps are vocational training centres built in response to religious extremism.

Last weekend CCP president Xi Jinping said his policies in Xinjiang were “totally correct”, and education of the population was “establishi­ng a correct perspectiv­e on the country, history and nationalit­y”.

“The sense of gain, happiness, and security among the people of all ethnic groups has continued to increase,” Xi told a CCP meeting.

“As long as he stays in power it will continue, and the world will watch all the Uighur people disappear one by one,” said Abdulghafu­r.

“They are fully armed to either completely get rid of us or completely make us one of them, like complete assimilati­on. There is no in-between pathway.”

 ?? Photograph: Emrah Gürel/AP ?? A protester from the Uighur community attends a demonstrat­ion in Istanbul on Friday. More than one million people from the Uighur and Turkic Muslim communitie­s in Xinjiang are believed to have been detained in internment camps since 2017.
Photograph: Emrah Gürel/AP A protester from the Uighur community attends a demonstrat­ion in Istanbul on Friday. More than one million people from the Uighur and Turkic Muslim communitie­s in Xinjiang are believed to have been detained in internment camps since 2017.

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