Rebiya Kadeer, former political prisoner, currently president of World
Uyghur Congress
China Tuesday condemned a top exiled Uighur leader
for her “absurd” comments about Britain’s lavish reception for President Xi
Jinping, adding that its far western region of Xinjiang was at peace.
The red carpet Britain has rolled out to welcome Xi is stained with the
blood of Uighurs, Tibetans and dissidents, Rebiya Kadeer, the president of the
World Uyghur Congress, said in Tokyo.
China’s repressive policies had turned Xinjiang, home to the Muslim
Uighur people, “almost into a war zone”, Kadeer added.
In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying dismissed
Kadeer’s remarks as being “absurd and extreme”, and characterized them as
“ignorant speech”.
“All types of people in Xinjiang live and work in peace,” Hua told a
daily news briefing. “There is only a small group of people that seek to
destroy China’s ethnic harmony and social stability. I think their actions and
words should be condemned.”
China says Islamist militants and separatists operate in energy-rich
Xinjiang on the borders of central Asia, where violence has killed hundreds in
recent years.
Radio Free Asia reported that at least 50 people died last month in an
attack at a Xijiang coal mine that police blamed on knife-wielding separatists,
just before China marked 60 years since its founding of the Xinjiang Autonomous
Region.
But exiles and rights groups say China has never presented convincing
evidence of the existence of a cohesive militant group, and that much of the
unrest can be traced back to frustration at controls over the culture and
religion of the Uighur people. Beijing strongly denies such charges.
China dismisses Kadeer as an “anti-Chinese splittist”. She is a former
Chinese political prisoner accused of leaking state secrets in 1999. She was
later allowed to leave on medical grounds and now lives in the United States. (From
Reuters)
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