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"While the four are charged with serious crimes,
including murder, some believe the trial is
politically motivated."
[The reverse of a trial, loosely speaking, in Kosovo
several months ago presided over by four ethnic
Albanian and one Western judge in which an ethnic Serb
was acquitted of murder but convicted of genocide.
I know, that takes a while to sink in.
That would not be considered a politically motivated
case in the opinion of Radio Free Europe, Johns
Hopkins professors or Human Rights Watch, who no doubt
have something to say about the human rights of
racist, separatist killers in Kyrgyzstan. Their
contribution to the cause can be found at:
http://www.hrw.org
The assistant professor quoted at the bottom, aptly
enough from the Naval Postgraduate School of
California, offers an intriguing justification for
foreign-backed Uighur separatist insurrections - the
four suspects in question are from China, Turkey and
Uzbekistan, none of them Kyrgyz: With the collapse of
the former Soviet Union Uighurs felt that they could
get their independence just like Kyzgyzstan,
Kazakhstan and "other Central Asian republics."  
The problem with this model, and one certainly known
to the U.S. naval scholar who made it, is that there
never was a Uighur Republic in the Soviet Union and
never could have been, as Uighurs are a minority in
several former Soviet republics. a majority in none.
Much like ethnic Albanians outside of Albania itself.
And China?
When the CIA gets ahold of a good thing, as they did
in Afghanistan in 1979, they just never let it go.] 


Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
Trial Focuses Attention on Possible Uighur Repression
Kyrgyzstan, September 1, 2001 [ 18:12 ]
By Nadia Usaeva, RFE/RL
PRAGUE. A trial of four ethnic Uighurs in Kyrgyzstan
is again focusing attention on the issue of Uighur
repression. While the four are charged with serious
crimes, including murder, some believe the trial is
politically motivated. They say Kyrgyzstan is bowing
to pressure from China, which is battling a Uighur
separatist movement. 
Four ethnic Uighurs are on trial in the Kyrgyz capital
Bishkek for allegedly committing 17 serious crimes,
including killing a Chinese businessman. 
All four men -- two from China and one each from
Turkey and Uzbekistan -- pleaded not guilty at the
start of their trial 15 August. 
An investigator with the Kyrgyz Internal Affairs
Ministry, Sabir Mirjalalov, tells RFE/RL's Kyrgyz
Service that the government has strong evidence of
serious crimes: 
"We've based our charges on the eyewitness accounts of
two individuals who were present at the crime scene.
They were with the victim, named Bayzakov, when he was
killed. According to the eyewitnesses, the prime
suspect, Ahadov, was pointing his gun at people who
were present at the crime scene to keep them from
moving after he shot the victim. Second, Ahadov
himself also confessed to the crime. He even replayed
the whole episode at the crime scene. And most
importantly, the car and gun that was used by Ahadov
to commit the crime have also been found." 
But the four are also accused of being members of an
Uighur political group called the Eastern Turkestan
Liberation Front, a separatist movement that is banned
in China -- leading to concern among some that the
trial is politically motivated. Kyrgyz prosecutors
allege the four men were trying to start a branch of
the separatist movement in Kyrgyzstan. 
Tursun Islam is the head of a Uighur organization
based in Bishkek called Democracy and Human Rights. In
an interview with RFE/RL, Islam says he believes the
four men on trial in Bishkek are falsely accused. 
"The charges against the four men say that they are
members of the Eastern Turkestan Liberation movement.
But these charges are false, and the prosecutors
couldn't provide any evidence to back up the charges
at the trial." 
A similar trial, also of four ethnic Uighurs, took
place in March. Those four were found guilty of
bombing a minibus in 1998 in the southern Kyrgyz city
of Osh. Two people were killed and 11 others seriously
injured. At least two of the four were sentenced to
death. 
But Uighur activists say this trial was also
politically motivated. One of the defense lawyers for
the four Uighurs, Gulnur Jalalova, is appealing their
case to the Kyrgyz Supreme Court. She tells RFE/RL: 
"These four men have nothing to do with the bombing,
and there haven't been any credible evidences to prove
otherwise. We've been arguing this point on the basis
of relevant law from the onset." 
The Uighurs, like the Kyrgyz, are a Turkic-speaking,
mostly Muslim people. Most of the 10 million Uighurs
live in northwestern China, in the Xinjiang Uighur
Autonomous Region. The province borders Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan. 
Beijing has been quick in the past to suppress
nationalist movements among the Uighurs and has put
pressure on its Central Asian neighbors not to
encourage any form of Uighur separatism. Around 50,000
Uighurs live in Kyrgyzstan. 
In order to curb the spread of Uighur separatism in
Xinjiang province, Beijing has tightened its control
of the province and strengthened cooperation with
Russia and several of Central Asian countries. Uighur
activists say authorities in Kyrgyzstan are simply
bowing to Chinese pressure. 
Justin Rudelson is a former associate at the Central
Asia and Caucasus Institute at Johns Hopkins
University in Washington. He says China exerts a
strong influence over the Central Asian states in
dealing with Uighurs: 
"There is a lot of pressure coming from China on the
governments of Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan to suppress
any kind of support for Uighur militant movements in
China, as well as any kind of development of armed
support for Kyrgyzstan or Kazakhstan. Because of that,
there has been a focus on the Uighur communities in
Kyrgyzstan and in Kazakhstan, making sure that they
are not involved in any kind of militant activity." 
The Uighurs in Xinjiang had been living in relative
peace until the collapse of the Soviet Union and the
subsequent emergence of the Central Asian republics as
independent states a decade ago. 
Gaye Christofferson, an associate professor at the
Naval Postgraduate School of California, says that
this development seemed to stir nationalist
aspirations of the Uighurs for an independent country
of their own. 
"I think a decade ago several things happened, and the
main thing that happened was that the Soviet Union
collapsed and that gave hope to a lot of Uighurs that
they would get their independence the way Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan and the other Central Asian republics got
their independence." 
This nationalist yearning led to several violent
anti-Chinese incidents, including a 1996 uprising in
the town of Ghulzha, 40 kilometers from the Kazakh border.

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