Monthly Archives: 7 月 2015

Thai embassy in Turkey closes after pro-Uighur protests

_84191077_8419107610 July 2015

From the section Asia

Riot police stand as a group of Uighur protesters demonstrate outside the Thai embassy in Ankara
Riot police stood guard at the Thai embassy in Ankara on Thursday

Thailand has closed its embassy in Turkey following protests over Thailand’s deportation of about 100 Uighurs to China.

The embassy in Ankara<!–more–> and the consulate in Istanbul have been temporarily shut after the consulate was stormed by Uighur supporters on Thursday.

Rights groups have criticised the deportation of Muslim Uighurs saying they face persecution in China.

China denies repressing Uighurs and called the deportees illegal migrants.

There have been days of unrest in Turkey over reports of Uighurs in western China being restricted by the Chinese government from observing the holy month of Ramadan.

Uighurs have close cultural and religious ties with Turkish Muslims.

Protests outside the Chinese embassy have seen Chinese flags burnt and on Thursday police fired pepper spray at demonstrators.

There have been reports of Chinese citizens being harassed and attacked and China issued a travel warning to its citizens travelling to Turkey.

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Uighurs already living in Turkey responded angrily, smashing windows at the Thai consulate in Istanbul

Thailand’s decision to deport about 100 Uighurs has raised tensions further.

Windows at the Thai consulate were smashed, furnishings damaged and the sign outside pulled down.

Thai spokesman Werachon Sukhondhapatipak told reporters the government had ordered the embassy and consulate to close temporarily on Friday.

He added: “We will assess the situation on a daily basis.”

About 400 Uighurs detained for illegally entering Thailand in March last year have been the focus of a diplomatic dispute between Turkey and China over where they should be moved to.

Thailand said about 100 people were removed on Wednesday, while an earlier group of 172 women and children were sent to Turkey in late June.
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Chinese Authorities Appear to Detain 4 Human Rights Lawyers

By CHRIS BUCKLEY  zhoushifengJULY 10, 2015

HONG KONG — The police detained one of China’s most prominent human rights lawyers in Beijing on Friday, after three other rights lawyers who worked together disappeared in the capital within 24 hours, apparently caught in an expanding investigation focused on their firm, their colleagues and family members said.

The reasons for moves against the lawyers remained unclear. Continue reading

Beijing Rights Lawyer ‘Missing,’ Believed Detained: Lawyer

image2015-07-10

Beijing-based lawyer Wang Yu in an undated photo.
Photo courtesy of Wang Yu’s microblog
Prominent rights attorney Wang Yu is missing from her Beijing home, presumedly detained by China’s state security police, rights activists and lawyers said.

Wang, who has defended high profile activists, including jailed Uyghur dissident Ilham Tohti, Cao Shunli and Wu Gan, has been incommunicado since the early hours of Continue reading

China’s Draft Online Security Law Could Further Tighten State Control of Netizens

2015-07-09

A draft cybersecurity law published by the National People’s Congress (NPC) looks set to formalize and extend Beijing’s already tight grip on the Chinese Internet, although official media denied it would curb people’s online freedom.

The draft law aims to “ensure network security, [and] safeguard the sovereignty of Continue reading

Hong Kong Charges Four Over Public Burning of Beijing’s Policy Paper

2015-07-07

Occupy Central leader Joshua Wong speaks to the media after a vote at the city’s legislature in Hong Kong, June 18, 2015.
AFP

image (56)
Four Hong Kong pro-democracy activists, including Occupy Central student leader Joshua Wong, face charges of obstructing the police in the course of their duty, Continue reading

Former 1989 Student Leader Calls On Beijing Allow Him to Attend Mother’s Funeral

 

2015-07-08

 

c7ce5d0a-6e6b-4ad1-877a-b9e59ea46c8aFormer Tiananmen student protest leader Xiong Yan has called on the ruling Chinese Communist Party to allow him to return home to bury his mother.

Xiong, 50, was briefly detained at Hong Kong’s border with China in April when he tried to visit his then terminally ill mother.

His plight mirrors that of dozens of exiled Continue reading

China’s Five Feminists Call For UN Pressure on Beijing

2015-07-06

Five Chinese feminists detained fimage (52)or planning an anti-sexual harassment campaign and since released on “bail” have written to the United Nations in a bid to make their release unconditional.

Wu Rongrong, Li Tingting, Wei Tingting, Wang Man, and Zheng Churan were released “on bail” in April after being detained on suspicion of “picking quarrels and stirring up trouble” on March 6, Continue reading

Yu Ying-shih: The Chinese Communists Are Not Confucianists

By Yu Ying-shih, published: July 1, 2015

The following is an unauthorized translation of an excerpt from an interview with Prof. Yu Ying-shih [via Skype] during a symposium in November 2014 marking the 65th Continue reading