China's Hooded, Handcuffed, Frogmarched Uighur Muslims
China's Hooded, Handcuffed, Frogmarched Uighur Muslims
By Richard S. Ehrlich
BANGKOK, Thailand -- China's claim that
Turkish diplomats helped
Uighur Muslim refugees become
terrorists in Syria and Iraq is
"laughable," Turkey said
after Chinese security forces wrapped black
bags over the
heads of 109 handcuffed "jihad" Uighurs during
their
forced flight from Thailand to China.
"These
allegations are ridiculous," Turkey's Foreign
Ministry
Spokesman Tanju Bilgic told reporters on July 15
in the Turkish
capital Ankara.
"This is not an
allegation to even answer. It is laughable," Mr.
Bilgic
said, Turkey's Anadolu Agency reported.
"A total of 109
illegal immigrants, who were repatriated from Thailand
to
China on July 9, had been on their way to Turkey, Syria or
Iraq to
join jihad, the Ministry of Public Security
confirmed," China's
official Xinhua news agency reported
on July 11.
"Recruitment gangs were uncovered in Turkey by
a Chinese police
investigation, which also discovered
that Turkish diplomats in some
Southeast Asian countries
had facilitated the illegal movement of
people," it
said.
"Of the 109 individuals returned to China...13 had
fled China after
being implicated in terrorist
activities, and another two had escaped
detention,"
Xinhua reported, quoting the Public Security
Ministry.
China is expected to harshly punish any
renditioned Uighurs
(pronounced: "WEE-gurs") deemed
guilty of involvement in terrorism.
On July 15, more than 50 worried Uighurs remained in limbo in Bangkok.
China
demanded Thailand send them to Beijing, while Turkey offered
to
give them sanctuary after earlier receiving 180
Uighurs from Thailand.
Exasperated by the diplomatic
pressure, Thailand's coup leader Gen.
Prayuth Chan-ocha
asked journalists: "What do you think I am going to
do?
Destroy investments with Turkey or ruin Thai-Chinese
ties?"
Minutes after the 109 Uighurs were forced onto a
China Southern
Airlines passenger plane in Bangkok on
July 9, Chinese security forces
handcuffed them and
draped each refugee's head in a large black bag,
and
allowed China Central Television (CCTV) to broadcast their
fate.
Each hooded Uighur wore a large sign around their
neck with a big
number written in red, while sitting next
to Chinese guards whose
uniforms were labeled:
"SWAT".
Upon arrival in China, the Uighurs -- still hooded
with hands cuffed
behind them -- were frogmarched down
the steps from the airplane onto
the tarmac while guards
kept each person's head down and body
bent-double
forward, a position used in China for decades to
keep
prisoners under control while walking.
CCTV showed
each SWAT officer wearing a white cloth mask with
circular
air filters, plus white latex gloves, apparently
fearing possible
disease from the Uighurs.
New
York-based Human Rights Watch's China Director, Sophie
Richardson,
tweeted to CCTV which posted photographs of
the airplane's hooded
passengers: "@cctvnews Thanks for
providing helpful photos of a gross
human rights
violation in
action."
https://twitter.com/cctvnews/status/619855303610253312/photo/1
Gen.
Prayuth also violated international agreements against
torture
and other protections when he sent the 109
minority ethnic Uighurs
back to China, according to the
U.S. State Department, the United
Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees, Human Rights Watch,
London's
Amnesty International and others.
"The
deportation of this group to China would amount to
refoulement,
and put them at risk of being tortured or
subjected to other cruel,
inhuman or degrading treatment
or punishment," UN High Commissioner
for Human Rights
spokesman Rupert Colville said in Geneva on July
10.
Thailand is a signatory to the Convention Against
Torture and Other
Cruel, Inhumane or Degrading Treatment
or Punishment, Mr. Colville
said.
When Gen. Prayuth,
who rules with absolute power and also as prime
minister
after his May 2014 coup, expelled the 109 Uighurs, he
angrily
told journalists:
"Do you want to feed them until they breed litters of offspring?"
That Thai-language
phrase -- "breed litters" -- is normally used
"to
describe dogs and other animals," reported Bangkok
Post's respected
columnist Kong Rithdee.
"In the
original Thai, the prime minister used the word 'krok,'
a
rougher, throatier and much more derogatory term than
the English
equivalent. Krok gives the image of animal
lust.
"It signifies a large number of puppies crawling
from the belly of a
bitch. It's not the term any mother
would want to be heard describing
their children," Mr.
Kong wrote.
About 340 Uighur men, women and children were
caught in scattered
raids across Thailand during the past
year, presumably fleeing China
by air or sea, or overland
through Vietnam, Laos or Cambodia.
Most denied
understanding any Mandarin Chinese language or that
they
were from China where Beijing discriminates against
Uighurs and
forbids some of their Muslim traditions
including long beards on men
and face-covering veils on
women.
Most Uighurs in China live in the impoverished
western province of
Xinjiang and consider themselves
Turkmen, an ethnic group who also
live in Turkmenistan,
Iran, Afghanistan and Turkey, and speak the
Turkic
language.
Some have struggled for decades for a
region-wide independent "East
Turkistan" which would
include Xinjiang.
Beijing describes that demand as a
terrorist plot fueled by the tiny
East Turkistan Islamic
Movement (ETIM) based in Pakistan which has
links to
Kashgar, Xinjiang's historic desert city near
northern
Pakistan on the ancient Silk Road.
Two ETIM top leaders were shot dead in Pakistan in 2003 and 2010.
China's Public Security Ministry said many of the
109 renditioned
Uighurs "had been radicalized by
materials released by the
[German-based] World Uighur
Congress and the East Turkistan Islamic
Movement."
In
2002, the U.S. State Department's Bureau of Counterterrorism
placed
ETIM on its list of
"Individuals and Entities
Designated by the State Department Under
Executive Order
13224."
In a separate "Foreign Terrorist Organization" list, the State Department said:
"It is the most militant
of the ethnic Uighur separatist groups
pursuing an
independent 'Eastern Turkistan,' an area that
would
include Turkey, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan,
Pakistan,
Afghanistan, and the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous
Region of China.
"ETIM is linked to al Qaeda and the
international mujahideen
movement," the State Department
said.
The U.S. imprisoned several ETIM suspects in Guantanamo Bay.
"The fact that most Uighur detainees from
Guantanamo have been
released, suggests that the U.S. has
determined that they were not
members of any terrorist
organization or combatants," Uighur expert
Dru Gladney, a
University of Hawaii in Manoa anthropology
professor,
told Voice of America in
2011.
ends