Chinese police in Inner Mongolia take into custody the last member of a jailed independence activist's family.
Authorities in
China’s northern Inner Mongolia
Autonomous Region have detained the
son of a prominent ethnic Mongolian
political prisoner after detaining
the man’s wife earlier this week.
Police in the regional capital Hohot
acted just days before the expected
release of Hada, who has been
serving a lengthy jail term for
seeking peaceful independence of
Inner Mongolia from China.
On Dec. 4, the Hohhot City Saihan
District Public Security Bureau
detained Hada’s son Uiles at an
Internet café shortly after he
issued a statement to the media
calling for the release of his
mother, Xinna, who had been detained
shortly before.
Uiles was released from police
custody shortly before midnight, but
detained again the following morning
by the same branch of the public
security bureau.
He is currently held at the Inner
Mongolia No. 1 Detention Center,
where his mother is being held,
according to the New York-based
Southern Mongolian Human Rights
Information Center (SMHRIC), which
confirmed Uiles’ whereabouts with a
friend in Hohot.
Bookstore raid
Xinna, 55, was detained by local
police in Hohhot at her Mongolian
Studies Bookstore on the evening of
Dec. 4 and has been accused of
“running an illegal business” by
public security authorities.
Uiles was able to escape from the
shop during the raid, but was later
tracked down by police in a nearby
Internet café.
Police also seized hundreds of
books, CDs, souvenirs, and the
store’s account book and computer.
It was the third raid on the store
in a week.
Xinna had opened the bookstore with
her husband before his arrest. She
has spoken out about her husband’s
situation and in support of Charter
08, a pro-democracy manifesto
co-authored by imprisoned Chinese
Nobel Laureate Liu Xiaobo.
She suffers from a serious heart
condition that requires daily
medication. Uiles told SMHRIC during
his brief release from detention
that he had tried to deliver his
mother’s medicine to her but was
refused admittance to the detention
center.
Xinna’s current health condition
remains unknown.
Independence activist
Hada, also 55, is scheduled to be
released from prison on Dec. 10
after serving 15 years in jail for
“splitting the country and engaging
in espionage” by forming the
Southern Mongolian Democratic
Alliance in 1995 with the goal of
independence from China.
Hada will also be subject to an
additional four-year suspension of
political rights after his release.
Hada is the author of a book
entitled The Way Out of Southern
Mongolia and editor of a
Mongolian journal titled The
Voice of Southern Mongolia.
Some ethnic Mongolian rights
activists refer to the province of
Inner Mongolia as Southern Mongolia
in reference to the Republic of
Mongolia on its northern border.
Mongolians are a recognized ethnic
minority in China and number around
6 million according to government
statistics.
Reported by
Joshua Lipes.