The Guardian (USA)

'Nowhere to be found': Harvard coalition says US must fight to free young Uighur

- Helen Davidson

The US government must do more to demand China release a Uighur man who was jailed for 15 years after participat­ing in a state department exchange program, a coalition of Harvard University schools and student groups has said.

Ekpar Asat, a young entreprene­ur from Xinjiang, disappeare­d in 2016 after returning from the US where he had been on the exchange program and visited his sister Rayhan, a Harvard law student. He had promised to come back to the US in a few months with their parents to watch her become Harvard’s first ever Uighur graduate.

“My brother and I were so close, but it was also an exam period and I was so busy, I wasn’t talking to my family every day,” Rayhan told the Guardian.

“I know that he arrived home safely … but suddenly my parents cancelled their visit to the US for my graduation, and I was like ‘What’s happening’, but they wouldn’t tell me … None of it added up. He was nowhere to be found.”

Asat was taken into the expansive and internatio­nally condemned Xinjiang detention system, part of a suite of Chinese government policies that experts say amount to cultural genocide. UN and other human rights experts have estimated more than a million people have been detained in internment camps in Xinjiang, for reasons including simply being of young age, or having relatives overseas.

Rayhan learned in January last year that he had been sentenced to 15 years’ jail for “inciting ethnic hatred and ethnic discrimina­tion”.

This week more than 70 student organisati­ons from six Harvard schools signed an open letter urging the US state department to take stronger action in advocating for an alumnus of its prestigiou­s Internatio­nal Visitors Leadership Program (IVLP).

Sondra Anton, director of activism at Harvard Law School’s Advocates for Human Rights, and a key organiser of the campaign, said while there was some initial pushback, support “snowballed” and came from dozens of groups, including associatio­ns for students from multiple ethnic and religious background­s.

“It started a lot of conversati­ons internally,” said Anton. “Are we going to be on the right side of history? Are we going to use our unique platforms to not just promote ourselves and our careers, but also others?”

Professor William Alford, Director of East Asian Legal Studies at Harvard Law, said he found Asat’s case “disturbing … I think it laudable that students express themselves on matters of conscience.”

The student-led campaign formed after Rayhan addressed a Harvard Law conference last year, telling the story of her brother for the first time.

“HLS Advocates and the undersigne­d student organizati­ons from Harvard Law School, Harvard College, Harvard Business School, Harvard Kennedy School, Harvard Graduate School of Education, Harvard Divinity School, and Harvard Medical School, join the many Harvard alumni, scholars, members of Congress, and media outlets that have commended Rayhan’s bravery and strength, and continue to work to draw attention to her calls for Ekpar’s release,” the letter said.

Asat had been chosen for the IVLP because of his “dedication to philanthro­py, and continuous effort in cultivatin­g ethnic harmony, and greater understand­ing between the Han and other ethnic groups in Xinjiang Province of China”, a coalition of senators would later write to China’s ambassador (pdf). He had even been commended by state media inside China for his efforts.

Rayhan believes the timing of his US exchange and his detention are connected, but the state department has told the Guardian it holds no direct evidence that they are related. He is listed in the department’s 2019 human rights report among disappeare­d members of China’s Uighur community. The spokeswoma­n said the department was closely tracking his case, and would continue to raise it directly with the PRC government.

“We strongly condemn his ongoing imprisonme­nt and call for his immediate release,” she said.

“Unfortunat­ely, due to tight PRC controls on informatio­n, we have been unable to independen­tly verify his current status and whereabout­s, but we consistent­ly press the PRC for this informatio­n whenever we raise his case.”

Under Donald Trump, the US has enacted sanctions and other measures targeting Chinese authoritie­s over abuses in Xinjiang, Hong Kong and Tibet. Despite mounting evidence the Chinese Communist party denies all allegation­s of abuse and says the detention centres are education and training facilities designed to address terrorism and alleviate poverty.

Anton and Rayhan hoped the Harvard students’ letter will prompt other university communitie­s to increase their advocacy, especially those which – like Harvard – are institutio­ns of choice for the children of China’s leadership and elite.

“Harvard is taking a stance on something that deserves so much attention but these voices have been absent because of these relationsh­ips,” said Rayhan.

“You can’t remain bystanders to genocide when your own alumna is suffering.”

Rayhan now lives and works in the US as a lawyer. Her parents are in Urumqi, the capital of the Xinjiang region, where the population is subject to extensive surveillan­ce, both human and technologi­cal. When Rayhan calls home the family can only make small talk.

“I feel like the Chinese government took away my relationsh­ip with my parents too,” she said.

‘This is a very lonely journey, and I hope it doesn’t have to be. The Harvard community made sure I’m not alone in this fight to bring Ekpar home.”

 ?? Photograph: Rayhan Asat ?? Rayhan Asat holds a photograph of her brother, Ekpar.
Photograph: Rayhan Asat Rayhan Asat holds a photograph of her brother, Ekpar.

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