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‘Uyghur Tribunal’ hears testimony of alleged China abuses

04-06-2021

LONDON/ BEIJING: A London-based people’s tribunal investigating whether China’s treatment of its minority Uighur population amounts to genocide opened on Friday with witness testimony detailing mass torture, rape and a range of other abuses.

The “Uyghur Tribunal” has no state backing and any judgment would not be binding on any government, but it has drawn a furious response from Beijing, which branded the hearings a “machine producing lies”.

The first hearings take place over four days, from Friday to Monday, and are expected to draw dozens of witnesses. A second session is expected in September.

The nine UK-based jurors of the tribunal, including lawyers and human rights experts, intend to publish a report in December on whether China is guilty of genocide.

Organizers hope the process of publicly laying out evidence of an alleged state-orchestrated campaign of repression against the Uighurs, a largely Muslim ethnic group, in China’s northwest Xinjiang province will compel international action against the country’s authorities.

According to the United Nations, at least one million Uighurs have been detained in the internment camps in Xinjiang, which borders eight countries including Afghanistan, Pakistan and India.

The first witness to testify on Friday, Qelbinur Sidik, an ethnic-Uzbek teacher from Xinjiang’s capital Urumqi, said she was ordered by communist party bosses to teach Mandarin-language classes in two fetid and crowded “re-education” camps, one male and one female, for Uighurs.

The so-called students were made to wear shackles during hours-long classes, she told the tribunal.

“Guards in the camp did not treat the prisoners as human beings. They were treated less than dogs,” Sidik said through an interpreter. “They enjoyed watching them being humiliated and their suffering was for them their joy.”

Female prisoners were allegedly abused when they were taken for interrogation.

“They were not only tortured but also raped, sometimes gang-raped,” Sidik said. “The things that I have witnessed and experienced, I can’t forget.”

Sidik said she was also subjected to forced sterilization before she was given a visa to visit her daughter in the Netherlands, and fled China.

‘I want my son to be freed’

The tribunal is chaired by prominent human rights lawyer Geoffrey Nice, who led the prosecution of ex-Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic and has worked on several cases brought before the International Criminal Court (ICC).

It was set up at the request of the World Uyghur Congress, an international organisation of exiled Uighurs.

The tribunal’s organizers said Chinese authorities had ignored requests to participate in the hearings but counsel for the tribunal said the United States and Australia had offered to provide relevant material, to add to thousands of pages of documentary evidence already compiled.

Critics of the camps, including the United Kingdom and the US, say inmates at the network of facilities have been subjected to human rights violations including arbitrary detention, forced labour, torture, forced sterilization and the separation of children from their jailed parents.

Ahead of giving testimony to the tribunal via video link, three Uighurs who fled from China to Turkey, described their treatment by Chinese authorities.

One of them, named Rozi, said she was forced into an abortion when six and a half months pregnant. Her youngest son has been detained since 2015, when he was just 13, and she hopes the tribunal’s work will help lead to his freedom.

“I want my son to be freed as soon as possible,” she said. “I want to see him be set free.”

Another, a former doctor, spoke of draconian birth control policies and a third, a former detainee, alleged he was “tortured day and night” by Chinese soldiers while imprisoned in the remote border region.

Beijing denounces hearings

China denies the allegations of abuse at internment camps and claims the facilities are “re-education” centres.

Officials insist that mass “education and training” is necessary in Xinjiang in order to fight what they call the “three evil forces of extremism, separatism and terrorism”, and boost economic development there.

In March, the tribunal was among four UK entities and nine individuals sanctioned by Beijing for raising concerns about the treatment of the Uighurs.

China has also publicly condemned the tribunal.

“It is not even a real tribunal or special court, but only a special machine producing lies,” foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said last week. “It was founded by people with ulterior motives and carries no weight or authority. It is just a clumsy public opinion show under the guise of law.” (Int’l News Desk)

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