Archive for the ‘Human rights’ Category
July 10, 2009
Correspondents in Urumqi and Beijing | The Australian, July 9, 2009
POLICE killed 400 Uighurs in the capital of China’s Xinjiang region during ethnic unrest there, exiled Uighur leader Rebiya Kadeer claimed yesterday.
Ms Kadeer said Uighur sources within “East Turkestan”, the separatist name for the northwest region, had told her 400 Uighurs had died “as a result of police shootings and beatings” in Urumqi since violence erupted there on Sunday.
Writing in The Wall Street Journal Asia, the president of the World Uighur Congress said unrest was spreading across the region and unconfirmed reports indicated more than 100 Uighurs had been killed in Kashgar, another major city in Xinjiang.
Continued >>
Tags:"East Turkestan", China, ethnic discrimination, Kashgar, Rebiya Kadeer, Uighurs killed, Xinjiang region
Posted in Commentary, Human rights, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »
July 10, 2009
David Whitehouse analyzes the upheaval shaking Western China.
Socialist Worker, July 9, 2009
Uighur women protesters challenge Chinese riot police during demonstrations in western Xinjiang province (Peter Parks | AFP)
LONG-SIMMERING grievances of China’s Muslim Uighur minority boiled over on June 6 after Chinese police attacked a peaceful demonstration in Urumqi, the capital of China’s vast western province of Xinjiang.
By the end of the evening, 158 people had been killed and 800 injured, according to Chinese officials. Official sources indicated that ethnic Chinese individuals and businesses owned by members of China’s ethnic Han majority were the main victims in the riots, but days later, officials still refused to give an ethnic breakdown of the dead or say how many had been killed by police.
Following the riot, security forces put the cities of Xinjiang under lockdown and held at least 1,500 in detention amid ominous reports of retaliatory violence by mobs of Han Chinese–who now form the majority in most of the province’s cities.
Full article
Tags:David Whitehouse, demonstration, discrimination, Guizhou riots, Han Chinese, Muslim Uighur minority, people killed and injured, police attack, Western China, Xinjiang province
Posted in China, Commentary, Human rights, Muslims, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »
July 10, 2009
The Times /UK, July 10, 2009
(Ishara S. Kodikara/AFP/Getty Images)
A Tamil girl at a refugee camp in the northern district of Vavuniya
About 1,400 people are dying every week at the giant Manik Farm internment camp set up in Sri Lanka to detain Tamil refugees from the nation’s bloody civil war, senior international aid sources have told
The Times.
The death toll will add to concerns that the Sri Lankan Government has failed to halt a humanitarian catastrophe after announcing victory over the Tamil Tiger terrorist organisation in May. It may also lend credence to allegations that the Government, which has termed the internment sites “welfare villages”, has actually constructed concentration camps to house 300,000 people.
Continued >>
Tags:civilians killed, concentration camps, ICRC, Manik Farm internment camp, Rhys Blakely, Sri Lankan government, Tamil refugees
Posted in crime, Human rights, Sri Lanka, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »
July 9, 2009
Yitzhak Shichor, Open Democracy, July 6, 2009
The broader roots of the eruption of protest in China’s far-west region of Xinjiang lie in the experience of the Uighur people under Beijing’s rule, says Yitzhak Shichor.
The reports of violence and deaths in the city of Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang province in northwest China, draw renewed attention to this comparatively neglected region of China and of central Asia. The exact details of what happened there on the night of 5-6 July 2009 are unclear and (inevitably) disputed, though the background may include the assaults on Uighur migrant workers at a toy factory in Guangdong province on 26 June (in which two are reported dead and dozens injured).
Continued >>
Tags:China, independence, turmoil in Urumqi, Uighur diaspora, Uighur migrant workers, Urumqi, World Uighur Congress, Xinjiang, Yitzhak Shichor
Posted in Commentary, Human rights, Muslims, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »
July 9, 2009
The Buck Stops Where It Began
By Ray McGovern | Counterpunch, July 8, 2009
Editor’s Note: Prior to giving a series of talks in Texas later this week, the author offered the following op-ed to the Dallas Morning News and the Fort-Worth Star-Telegram. Both newspapers in George W. Bush’s home state turned it down.
Seldom does a crime scene have so clear a smoking gun. A two-page presidential memorandum of Feb. 7, 2002, leaves no room for uncertainty regarding the “decider” on torture. His broad-stroke signature made torture official policy.
This should come as no surprise. You see, the Feb. 7, 2002, memorandum has been posted on the Web since June 22, 2004, when then-White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales mistakenly released it, along with other White House memoranda.
Continued >>
Tags:al-Qaeda and Taliban detainees, George W. Bush, memos, Ray McGovern, torture
Posted in crime, Human rights, torture, Uncategorized, USA | Leave a Comment »
July 9, 2009
| Islam Online, July , 9 2009
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| By Politics in Depth Team |
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| Xinjiang region is to the north-west of China. |
Watching China’s 2008 Olympic Mascots jumping around in their colorful customs and fireworks lightning the sky of the massive country, you would be witnessing the bright side of the communist regime.On the other side stands a picture painted with red and green. In its dark green uniform, the Chinese army is filling up lakes with the blood of inhabitants of the Muslim-majority region of East Turkistan (Xinjiang) butchering 156 protestors, wounding hundreds, and arresting 1,400.
Muslims in Xinjiang (Uighurs) have been suffering under the Chinese occupation for a long time. The region is rich with oil, gas reserves, and about 121 minerals out of the 148 that China produces. Accordingly, the communist regime has given itself a freehand to suppress the Muslim population, burn their Islamic books, tear down mosques, and work on erasing the Muslim identity off the region. The Chinese government has been ruling with iron fist for long time and all is taking place under the silence of the international community. Must it be that Xinjiang Muslims have a charismatic leader in exile like that of Buddhists of the Tibet to get international attention?
What are the motives of the Chinese government? And who are the Xinjiang Muslims?
IslamOnline.net presents this collective folder in an attempt to present a more comprehensive picture of the status of the Uighur Muslims in Xinjiang. |
Tags:China, East Turkistan (Xinjiang), Muslim Uighurs, suppression
Posted in Commentary, Human rights, Muslims, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »
July 8, 2009
Middle East Online, July 7, 2009


At least 156 people were killed in Urumqi unrest
OIC deplores disproportionate use of force, firepower against China’s Muslim Uighurs.
JEDDAH – Muslim states said they were “deeply concerned” on Tuesday by riots which left at least 156 people dead in China’s Xinjiang region, where Muslim Uighurs form the largest ethnic group.
The Organisation of the Islamic Conference deplored the “disproportionate use of force,” calling upon Beijing to open an “honest probe over the seriously dangerous events and to bring those responsible to justice”.
“It seems from the huge number of civilian casualties that there has not been cautious and proportionate use of force and firepower,” the Jeddah-based grouping of 57 Muslim countries said in a statement.
It called on Beijing to address the “problem of Muslim groups and communities in China in a broad manner that would address the roots of the issue.”
At least 156 people were killed and more than 1,000 wounded when violence erupted in the capital of China’s northwestern Xinjiang region, Urumqi, on Sunday after decades of simmering tensions between Uighurs and Han Chinese.
Several human rights groups have expressed concern over the fate of 1,434 people who were taken into police custody, saying they could be tortured or mistreated.
Tags:China, detainees, Muslim Uighurs, Organisation of the Islamic Conference, people killed and injured, tensions, Urumqi
Posted in Commentary, Human rights, Muslims, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »
July 7, 2009
By Glenn Greenwald
According to The New York Times this morning, violent clashes between Chinese government forces and Muslim Uighurs — that country’s long-oppressed minority — have left at least 140 people dead and close to 1,000 injured. This incident in Western China highlights an important fact about America’s “War on Terror.”
Just imagine if the Uighurs were a Christian — rather than Muslim — minority, battling against the tyrannical Communist regime in Beijing, resisting various types of persecution, and demanding religious freedom. They would be lionized by America’s Right, as similar Christian minorities, oppressed by tyrannical regimes, automatically are. Episodes like these — where a declared Tyranny like China violently acts against citizens with whom we empathize — are ones about which, in general, the American political class loves to sermonize.
But the Uighurs are Muslim, not Christian, and hostility towards them thus easily outweighs the opportunity they present to undermine the Chinese Government. Rather than support and venerate them, we instead spent this decade declaring them to be “enemy combatants” and locking them up in Guantanamo — despite the fact that they have never evinced any interest in doing anything other than resisting Chinese persecution, and have certainly never taken actions against the U.S. (as even the Bush administration ultimately admitted). Yet even now, both Congress and the administration actively block release into the U.S. even of those Uighurs we wrongfully imprisoned for years, while the Right screams with outrage — and fear — over the administration’s commendable efforts to find a home for them elsewhere.
For all the Serious analysis about the War on Terror, so much of it has been driven by nothing more complex or noble than sheer hostility towards Muslims. Muslims generally — not just Al Qaeda — replaced Communists as our New Enemy and became the new enabling force for our endless state of War and never-ending expansions of executive power. Rather obviously, the Uighurs were swept into the Enemy category solely by virtue of their status as Muslims. What more compelling evidence of that could be imagined than the fact that we imprisoned — and continue to imprison — people at Guantanamo whose only political interest is in resisting oppression by the Chinese government?
Tags:China, Chinese government, killed and injured people, Muslim Uighurs, United States
Posted in Commentary, Human rights, Muslims, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »
July 7, 2009
BBC News, July 7, 2009
The ship left the Cypriot port of Larnaca on Monday
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Israel has deported eight pro-Palestinian activists detained at sea last week as they tried to ferry aid to Gaza in defiance of Israel’s blockade.
Nobel peace laureate Mairead Maguire and former US congresswoman Cynthia McKinney was among them.
They complain the Israeli navy seized them illegally in Palestinian waters.
Israel’s navy has blockaded Gaza since the election victory of Hamas militants in 2006. It said the Greek ship ignored orders to stop and was intercepted.
Continued >>
Tags:Cynthia McKinney, Gaza blockade, Israel, kidnapped activists, Mairead Maguire, peace activists
Posted in crime, Gaza, Human rights, Peace Movement, Uncategorized, Zionist Israel | Leave a Comment »
July 7, 2009
By Thalif Deen | Inter Press Service
UNITED NATIONS, Jul 6 (IPS) – When the administration of President Barack Obama formally abandoned the longstanding U.S. “war on terror” – perceived by some as a codeword for “war against Islam” – there were hopes of a new relationship between the United States and the Muslim world after eight long years of political friction.
A significant shift in U.S. policy was also articulated by Obama when he told a predominantly Muslim audience in Egypt last month that “America is not – and never will be – at war with Islam.”
The sentiments he expressed, including an appeal for “a new beginning between the United States and Muslims around the world”, were applauded globally.
But the ground realities, both in the United States and in Western Europe, have not caught up with the widespread political euphoria.
Continued >>
Tags:anti-Muslims, Europe, Muslim world, Muslims, Sarkozy, United States
Posted in Commentary, Human rights, Muslims, Uncategorized, US policy | Leave a Comment »
Uighurs claim 400 killed in unrest in western China
July 10, 2009Correspondents in Urumqi and Beijing | The Australian, July 9, 2009
POLICE killed 400 Uighurs in the capital of China’s Xinjiang region during ethnic unrest there, exiled Uighur leader Rebiya Kadeer claimed yesterday.
Ms Kadeer said Uighur sources within “East Turkestan”, the separatist name for the northwest region, had told her 400 Uighurs had died “as a result of police shootings and beatings” in Urumqi since violence erupted there on Sunday.
Writing in The Wall Street Journal Asia, the president of the World Uighur Congress said unrest was spreading across the region and unconfirmed reports indicated more than 100 Uighurs had been killed in Kashgar, another major city in Xinjiang.
Continued >>
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Tags:"East Turkestan", China, ethnic discrimination, Kashgar, Rebiya Kadeer, Uighurs killed, Xinjiang region
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