Saturday, November 24, 2007

Everyone cares - but do they care enough

There is no shortage of caring about the plight of the Uighurs among ordinary people, and it is only the ordinary people who can make a difference. So why do they not do something about cruelty and injustice, about torture of the innocent? Are they only too ready to tell themselves everything is alright really - it was just a momentary lapse when they reacted to a pain felt by others far out of their sphere? Or are their hearts hardened; are they just too ready to turn away and shove the idea into the dim recesses of their minds.

I believe people can change, or at least they can allow themselves space for ideas they had once banished. When I wrote to Jacques Rogge of the International Olympics Committee this week, it was to remind him that the dream of introducing China to the idea of actual human rights was laudable, but flawed. Surely the knowledge that Chinese people are being forcibly evicted and imprisoned so that smart Olympic sites can be built to impress the world, is alone a degradation of the Olympian ideals. If the IOC want to really do something about human rights they would make the biggest humanitarian gesture of all by calling off the Beijing Olympics. I wonder if they care about human rights that much?

Monday, November 19, 2007

Channel 4 news of the massacre in 1997


Following this massacre many people were detained. Some are still in prison while others have been executed. Many of those detained have received no trial.

This type of event is only too regular in east Turkistan, Tibet and inded China itself - but only rarely is it captured on video so that our disbelieving eyes and ears can take it in.

To help us remember this injustice, vigils are held every year on the 5th February outside Chinese embassies around the world. For more details please go to the link on the right entitled 'Steve's page.'

Saturday, November 17, 2007

EDM - UIGHURS AND REBIYA KADEER - please ask your MP to sign up

Told you something would happen if we all got together.
There is shortly going to be an EDM brought to the House of Commons to highlight the case of Rebiya. But for this development to make sense you have to get hold of your MP. Not difficult. Just Google their name and send an email

EDM 2138 Bottomly, Peter
"That this House calls on the Government to ask the government of China to respect the ethnic historical differences of the Uyghur people of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region and to restore their right to equal treatment in employment and, under the law, to freedom of speech and religious worship and to education in their own language; to ask for an end to the persecution of peaceful critics and to aggressive attempts at assimilation such as the removal of young Uyghur women to the eastern provinces of China; and asks for the immediate release of the children of Rebiya Kadeer, unjustly imprisoned or detained following her election as President of the World Uyghur Congress, and of the Canadian citizen Huseyin Celil, who should be allowed to rejoin his family in Canada."
If you think there is any chance your MP might sign it please write asking that they do. We only have this session of parliamnent which ends on 18th December for MPs to sign. NOT MUCH TIME. If you could persuade anyone else to do likewise it would be amazing.

(Early Day Motions - EDM's are formal motions submitted to the House of Commons for debate)

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

About a month ago I wrote to a few Heads of State, Prime Ministers etc. asking what they were prepared to do to help the Uighurs as their distant voices beg for help. Rhodri Morgan is the first to grace me with a respose, for which I thank him. Obviously I don't expect the Welsh Assembly to have too much clout in the field of international diplomacy (for my money international diplomants are pretty much deviod of what you and I call integrity anyway) but I nevertheless reproduce a relevant extract from the letter which refers to the UK China Human Rights Dialogue on 5th February 2007:

"The UK government also addressed wider issues of concern, including reported abuses in the Xianjiang Uighur Autonomous Region. We are concerned by the suppression of peaceful expression of political, cultural and religous rights and believe the Chinese government is using the pretext of counter-terrorism measures to further limit and abuse the ligitimate rights of the Uighur community and other ethnic groups. The UK government also handed over a list of individual cases of concern at the dialogue which included Rebiya Kadeer's children. The UK government continue to monitor these cases."

I bet all the 'disappeared', the prisoners of concience in torture chambers and the raped children in East Turkistan feel much better now.....

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

The Tibetan Perspective

It amazes me that people actually visit this blog - for one thing it means I have to keep updating it! Thank you, thank you - it is your support which keeps me going.

On Sunday night I met Lobsang Topgyal. He is a Buddist monk from Tibet. It is easy to turn away from things you don't understand - like how to pronounce his name - but it isn't easy to turn away from his story.

Tibet is in a similar position to East Turkistan (or Xinjiang). It is overrun by Chinese and the culture of the indigenous people is being extinguished. Lobsang was arrested, imprisoned and tortured. When he was released he had two broken legs and his head was so badly beaten he permanently lost the sight of one eye. His body is ravaged by scars. His eventual escape from Tibet took 27 days, travelling at night across the cold Tibetan plateau. He escaped only to try and tell the world how bad things are in his country. Worse than Burma, he says. Far worse than Burma.

This is a studious man of gentle spirit, not a man who would lie. Many people risk their lives to tell us of the terrible things China does to their country.

And we respond by giving China the Olympic Games. Shame on us.

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Even we have fears

My friend Karol came back from China last week and was aware as a tourist of the undercurrents which visitors are discouraged to question.

'You are right China is an amazing place to see and I was pleased to find there is a 'women's' movement especially against the one child per family rule - women are compulsorily sterilised afterwards, did you know? I knew about the rule but not the aftermath. Also the book 'Wild Swans' is banned in China, also interesting to find out.'

Karol's most poignant remark was left until last: 'I would be worried about my name going on the blog - it may affect future visa applications.'

And that, my dears is the point. Even we are afraid of the implications of free speech. Does this mean we have free speech? No! It means we most definitely do not have free speech when it comes to China.

(Needless to say I have changed her name. And if anyone else would like to comment anonymously, I will be happy to post comments on your behalf.)

Friday, October 19, 2007

Rebiya Kadeer in Cardiff

The Uighur people suffer under a repressive administration in a similar way to the Tibetan people. Peaceful calls
for self-determination and expressions of Uighur culture have been met with brutality including the death penalty, long periods of detention and torture.

Rebiya Kadeer, a businesswoman and campaigner for women, has herself spent time in prison and her children have suffered, and continue to suffer, violently at the hands of the Chinese authorities.

Alun Davies, Welsh Assembly Minister (pictured), along with Amnesty International, was instrumental in bringing Rebiya to Wales earlier in October. It was an opportunity to hear this inspirational woman working at great risk to defend her people.

Nice to have some comments

Today I have been reading the comments (see below) from Merlin and he does indeed have a point.

The purpose of this blog is to draw attention to the oppression of the Uighurs by their neighbours and insidious conquerors - China. Merlin suggests that even without realizing it, I am an oppressor too. Its a frightening thought.

We know the Uighur people are not alone, but they suffer because they are on the real front line between simple pastoral existence and the grand designs of a hungry neighbour.

Can you and I be certain that our cheque books are not every bit as lethal as Chinese bayonets? Can we really be sure that the export of our less than perfect culture is not every bit as destructive as the crushing colonialism of China? Is the insatiable energy consumption of China driven by the frivolous desires of our own consumerism?

China makes to our order. To do so it needs energy supplies. To gather energy supplies it steals from others.

Have I heard that last bit before?

Monday, October 15, 2007

For Andrew

My friend Andrew says this blog is not exciting enough. I do see his point. However, the situation for the Uighurs is appalling, not exciting. They live it every day. It is our part to shout loudly that the destruction of ethnic groups is is not acceptable. Try it - that's exciting! Have a holiday there! Excitement is not in reading my words, but in doing something with them.

Many millions of Chinese have been deliberately brought in to settle in East Turkistan and now far outnumber the original inhabitants.
  • Uighurs now can't get a job unless they speak Chinese.
  • Only Chinese is spoken in schools, causing a communication rift within families.
  • Girl children are taken from their families and spend years hundreds of miles away in eastern China where they are taught only Chinese culture and have to take a Chinese husband.
  • One child policy is enforced by the Chinese government and compulsory sterilization follows.
  • Only 16 percent of publications are in the Uighur language. The Uighurs do not even have their own encyclopedia, dictionary, or basic scientific books in their language.
  • In the city of Urumchi alone some 370 thousand books were destroyed as ‘remnants of the past.
  • If you voice your concern you are imprisoned or 'disappeared'

Sunday, October 14, 2007

A bit of regional background noise

I thought a map would be useful at this stage, and this one shows how China has artificially grown itself over the past few years. Because China prefers to do things slowly and quietly we are largely ignorant of what has been going on. Ignorant no longer!

You can see that the Uigurs who live in East Turkistan have quite a large land mass. Manchuria was annexed in 1949, as was Tibet. Poor Manchuria has been all but submerged. Inner Mongolia is likely to suffer a similar fate. I was most fortunate to meet some Mongolians when I was on the Great Wall – one of whom bravely explained the real one child policy to me. It was not supposed to apply to her, as she was a minority race, but it was enforced just the same. She kissed me for having three children. I felt dreadful.

All in all, 90% of "minorities" have either disappeared or been dispossessed of their homelands and/or submerged by massive influx of Chinese colonists since 1949. In fact, if you look at the map you can easily see that China is actually half the size it should be.

China also lays claims to large parts of India, so beware, India.

Adapted from "Tibet: The Facts" by Paul Ingram.
Tibetan Young Buddhist Association, 1990.

Friday, October 12, 2007

The children


To start with, anyone who has 11 children has my complete and utter respect. Anyone who has 11 children and a career is beyond description. But a person with such a family, with her own business, who helps other women to go into business, who is prepared to speak out against injustice, who becomes a political prisoner and is still prepared to speak out again and again - is really something!

But what of her children?

Some made it into exile.

2 of her sons have been detained at the hands of the Chinese.

One of her daughters was forced to witness 2 other brothers being beaten, one so badly he was carried out on a stretcher. He has not been heard of since.

The daughter has been placed under house arrest.

My children are fine. They can say pretty much what they like, go where they like - the usual stuff.

How are yours?

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Rebiya

8 years in prison will change you. 2 years in solitary will change you forever. Rebiya I thank you for the little hat. I will do my best for you.