Rebiya Kadeer behind Xinjiang riot
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Rebiya Kadeer |
The Chinese government claimed that evidence
unearthed so far has revealed that the separatist World Uygur Congress
led by Rebiya Kadeer was behind the deadly July 5 Xinjiang riot, in
which at least 156 people died and more than 1000 were injured.
Following are news reports by Xinhua, China’s national news agency.
Evidence showed the riot was organized. It was instigated and
masterminded by the World Uygur Congress led by Kadeer, the government
sources said.
The Congress used the June 26 factory brawl between Uygur and Han
ethnic workers in Guangdong Province, in which two Uygurs died, to
create chaos.
On July 1, the Congress held a special meeting, plotting to instigate
unrest by sending messages via the Internet, telephones and mobile
phones.
On July 4, some people inside the country began to send out a flood
of online posts encouraging people to go to the Renmin Square in Urumqi,
capital of the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, to protest on July 5 to
support separatists abroad.
At 1:06 a.m. July 5, police in Urumqi were tipped off that some
people were putting out illegal information calling for an illegal
gathering at Renmin Square at 7 p.m. July 5.
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Riots broke out on July 5 and killed 156 people |
According to recordings of calls, at 11 a.m. July 5, Kadeer said, as
she called her younger brother in Urumqi, “A lot of things have
happened, and we all know something might happen in Urumqi tomorrow
night.”
On July 6, Kadeer held an emergency meeting with some senior members
of the Congress to make plans to further stir up both domestic and
overseas demonstrations and to call for intervention from foreign
Governments and human rights institutions.
Their schemes were immediately materialized in the attack on China’s
consulate in Munich, Germany, on Monday morning and the violence done by
over 150 separatists in front of China’s embassy in the Netherlands that
afternoon.
All these facts pointed to Kadeer, whose personal experience bore
further evidence of her splittist connection.
Kadeer was elected in 2006 to be the chairwoman of the Congress,
which was founded in Munich in 2004.
The Congress, an organization alleging to represent the ultimate
interests of East Turkestan people, is wholly dedicated to masterminding
secessionist activities in the name of human rights and democracy, the
Government said.
Born in Xinjiang in 1951, Kadeer, a former businesswoman in China,
made a fortune illegally from the 1980s on through tax evasion and
fraud.
She was sentenced to an eight-year imprisonment in 2000 on charges of
illegally disclosing state secrets, and was released on bail in 2005 to
seek medical treatment in the United States.
She immediately got involved with overseas terrorists, separatists
and extremists forces there, according to Wang Lequan, Communist Party
chief of Xinjiang.
Kadeer once claimed the Congress would plot to sabotage activities
marking the 60th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of
China this year.
Touted as the “mother of Uygur people” by East Turkestan terrorists,
Kadeer constantly visited Germany and other countries in northern Europe
to build support.
“Kadeer’s credentials got the recognition of overseas East Turkestan
forces, and her experience is also an advantage to be capitalized on by
Western anti-Chinese forces,” said Ma Dazheng, director of the Xinjiang
development research center of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
Pan Guang, an expert in international affairs and director of the
Shanghai International Studies Center, said, “The East Turkestan
terrorist forces portray Kadeer as a figure comparable to the Dalai Lama
to promote her international influence.”
“Actually, they just want to follow the road of the Dalai Lama to put
the so-called Xinjiang issue into the international spotlight,” he said. |