Authorities in
northern China have refused to honor
the scheduled release date of a
prominent ethnic Mongolian political
prisoner and have offered no
explanation for his continued
imprisonment, according to a
regional human rights watchdog.
The New York-based Southern
Mongolian Human Rights Information
Center (SMHRIC) said an uncle of
Hada was told by authorities that
his nephew had already been
transferred the to Inner Mongolia
Autonomous Region (IMAR) capital of
Hohot from Ulaanhad, where he had
been held in prison.
Hada was scheduled to be released on
Dec. 10 after serving 15 years in
jail for “splitting the country and
engaging in espionage” after forming
the Southern Mongolian Democratic
Alliance in 1995 with the goal of
independence from China.
Family detained
Hada’s wife Xinna and son Uiles are
also still being held by authorities
after being detained earlier in the
week by public security officials in
Hohot.
Xinna was detained on charges of
“running an illegal business” in a
Dec. 4 raid on the family’s
bookstore, while her son was picked
up by security officials the
following day and accused of
“involvement in drug dealing.”
Neither has been provided with a
defense attorney.
Phone calls to the prison where Hada
was held, as well as to the center
where his wife and son are detained,
went unanswered Friday.
Ongoing persecution
SMHRIC said that according to Hada’s
uncle Haschuluu, authorities in the
IMAR called a series of urgent
meetings in schools, colleges, and
other units with a majority
Mongolian population beginning as
early as Dec. 1 and ordered the
suspension of all public events in
the region after announcing his
scheduled release.
The group said in a statement that
authorities aim to punish Hada and
his family for their continued
support of Mongolian independence
from Chinese rule through peaceful
means.
“SMHRIC considers the Chinese
authorities’ acts of ongoing and
persistent persecution of Hada’s
family as a well-planned retaliation
against the family’s refusal to
acquiesce to the authorities’
demands for silence.”
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.
Mongols are a recognized ethnic
minority in China and number around
6 million according to government
statistics.
Reported by
Joshua Lipes.