海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Ilham Tohti: Why Chinese court gave life sentence to Muslim Uighur scholar

Ilham Tohti: A moderate advocate for China鈥檚 ethnic Uighur population was sentenced Tuesday, underscoring the degree to which Beijing is willing to crackdown on the group after multiple attacks this year.

By Anne Steele, Staff writer

China鈥檚 leading advocate for the rights of ethnic Uighurs was jailed for life Tuesday, a sentence that signals the government鈥檚 resolve to silence dissent amid a surge in ethnic violence.

Ilham Tohti, who pleaded not guilty last Wednesday to separatism charges, is a former university professor who is acclaimed internationally聽for his attempt to facilitate dialogue between China's Han majority聽and minority Muslim Uighurs in the far western Xinjiang Province.

A court in Urumqi, in Xinjiang,聽handed down the sentence after convicting Mr. Tohti in a two-day trial, his lawyer, Li Fangping, said by telephone from outside the courthouse, the Associated Press reports. It is the most severe penalty in a decade for anyone in China convicted of illegal political speech.聽

The defendant remained calm during the session but shouted 鈥淚 don't accept this!鈥 when the sentence was read, according to the AP.聽Tohti taught economics at Ethnic Minorities University in Beijing until his arrest in January.

The sentencing points to Beijing's willingness to crackdown on Uighurs of all types after a series of high-profile attacks this year were traced by authorities to extremists from Xinjiang. Beijing accuses Uighur separatists of orchestrating an attack on a train station in western China that killed 33 in April, and of plowing an SUV through a crowd of tourists in Tiananmen Square last October.

Academics within China and abroad fear the sentencing will chill ethnic dialogue.

"Ilham Tohti's situation gives scholars like me who ... work on the issue great concern about our safety and academic freedom,"聽a scholar told the Associated Press after聽Tuesday's聽sentencing, requesting anonymity because of fear of punishment from authorities.

The sentencing sends "a very disturbing message," said Willy Lam, a political analyst at the City University of Hong Kong. "Beijing's message is that they do not look to dialogue with the Uighurs but suppression."聽

Peter Ford, 海角大神's Beijing bureau chief, reported recently that China blames attacks that have killed more than 300 people聽in the past year 鈥 half of them policemen 鈥 on what it calls separatist terrorists from Xinjiang.聽

Many Uighurs say that the government's policies in Xinjiang have created a fertile soil for radicalization. In a briefing, Mr. Ford explains what's driving Uighur grievances:

This summer,聽Xinjiang authorities cracked down聽on expressions of religious faith, discouraging veils and long beards, and trying to force government employees to ignore the Ramadan fast, the Monitor reported.

'Incited ethnic hatred'聽

Chinese state press agency Xinhua said the court ruling claimed Tohti coerced students to work for his website, UighurOnline, and built a criminal syndicate.

The ruling also said articles on the website incited ethnic hatred and encouraged others to violence in addition to attacking China鈥檚 ethnic, religious, economic, and family planning policies.

Tohti's writings were moderate rather than extreme, the Monitor reports:

Foreign governments and international rights groups criticized China鈥檚 treatment of Tohti and Western diplomats who tried to attend the trial were turned away at the courthouse, according to the New York Times. Foreign journalists were barred from attendance.

The Economist reported that the sentence was harsher than many had expected:

Tohti has said in the past that he would not be surprised if he were jailed, the Monitor reports. In a 2009 interview he said that 鈥渋n this country 鈥 where you can go to jail for what you say, for running a website, for just speaking the truth, being imprisoned would be an honor for me.鈥