US SECRETARY OF STATE JOHN KERRY AND US PRESIDENT BARRACK OBAMA CONDEMNS CHINA'S CONVICTION OF ILHAM TOHTI
The United States
has expressed strong concern after China jailed Uighur academic Ilham Tohti for
life.
Secretary of State
John Kerry said he was "deeply disturbed" at the move. He and the
White House both called for Tohti's immediate release.
China's foreign
ministry said it was opposed to foreign interference in China's judicial
sovereignty.
Tohti was jailed on
Tuesday after Chinese authorities accused him of promoting separatism.
Several of his
students have been arrested on similar charges.
Ilham Tohti has
spoken out on behalf of the Muslim Uighur minority group, who live in Xinjiang
in China's far west. He has called for dialogue between Beijing and the Uighurs
as a way of reducing tensions.
In a statement, Mr
Kerry called Tohti's sentence "retribution" by Beijing for Tohti's
promotion of human rights for Uighur citizens, and said his detention
"silenced an important moderate Uighur voice".
The White House
said civil society leaders like Tohti play a "vital
role" in reducing ethnic tensions in China.
"We stress the
importance of Chinese authorities differentiating between peaceful dissent and
violent extremism," it said.
In a daily press
briefing on Tuesday evening, China's foreign ministry spokesman Hua Chunying
was asked by reporters to explain Tohti's sentence.
She said:
"China's judicial authorities made their ruling in accordance with the
law. I would like to remind you that China is a country governed by the rule of
law, and China's judicial authorities handled the case according to the
law."
"We firmly
oppose interference in China's judicial sovereignty and independence by any
country."
In one of the few
Chinese reports on the case, Xinhua said Tohti
had used the Uighur Online site and classes that he taught at Beijing's Minzu
University to advocate for separatism as well as attracted students and
citizens to join him.
Tohti was detained
in January after he criticised Beijing's strong response to a suicide car attack
near Tiananmen Square carried out by Uighurs from Xinjiang.
China has been
grappling with a spate of violent public attacks this year, which authorities
have attributed to Uighur extremists inspired or aided by overseas terror
groups.
In response it has
launched a crackdown, arresting and jailing scores of people for terrorism
activities. Several have been sentenced to death.
But Uighur
activists say that China's strong-armed tactics in Xinjiang - including
cultural and religious repression - are fuelling tensions.
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