Dear list members:

I hope you are well.  My name is Kathy Polias and I am the United
Nations Liaison for the Uyghur American Association
(www.uyghuramerican.org), a nonprofit organization in the United
States that promotes the human rights of the Uyghur people of East
Turkestan [also known as the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR)
of China].  I am writing to ask you to participate in the following e-
mail action.

Below is a letter/message for individuals to e-mail to United Nations
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon asking him to make a public statement
regarding:  the Chinese authorities' brutal suppression of a peaceful
Uyghur protest on July 5, 2009; and the grave human rights violations
that the authorities committed during -- and have committed in the
aftermath of -- the protest and the ethnic unrest in July 2009, which
have included but have not been limited to arbitrary detentions,
enforced disappearances, arbitrary sentencing of individuals to death
after trials plagued with politicization and intense strangleholds on
due process, and arbitrary executions.

Please copy and paste the letter/message below into an e-mail; type
your name, city/state, and country at the bottom; and e-mail it to
Secretary-General Ban-Ki Moon at [email protected].  Here are some
suggestions for what to type in the subject heading/line of the e-
mail:

For SG Ban Ki-moon -- please help the Uyghur people
For SG Ban Ki-moon -- the Uyghurs desperately need your help
For SG Ban Ki-moon -- please help stop China's persecution of Uyghurs

Thank you so much everyone.

Best wishes
Kathy Polias

Kathy Polias
United Nations Liaison/Communications Specialist
Uyghur American Association
Cell phone number:  347-285-6546
E-mail:  [email protected]
Mailing address and facsimile: 1701 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Suite 300
Washington, DC 20006, Fax No:  (202) 349-1491
Website:  www.uyghuramerican.org


*************************************************************************************************************************
Dear Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon:

I am deeply troubled by China’s brutal suppression of a peaceful
Uyghur protest on July 5, 2009 in Urumchi, the regional capital of
East Turkestan [also known as the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region
(XUAR) of China], particularly by the numerous witness accounts
reported in the media and provided to Uyghur organizations abroad that
security forces committed extrajudicial killing of protestors.  I am
also deeply concerned about other grave human rights violations that
the authorities committed during – and have committed in the aftermath
of – the peaceful protest and the ethnic unrest in Urumchi in July
2009, which have included but have not been limited to the following:
•       The authorities have detained thousands of people in connection with
the July 2009 events and arrested many of these people during mass
detentions, including mass roundups of young Uyghur men.  The
authorities have subjected an untold number of Uyghurs to enforced
disappearances.  Human Rights Watch documented the enforced
disappearances of 43 young Uyghur  men and boys who were detained in
large-scale sweeps and in targeted raids, but noted that the number of
disappeared is likely significantly higher than 43.  In fact, Brad
Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said, “The cases we
documented are likely just the tip of the iceberg.”
•       The authorities have ensured that defendants prosecuted in
connection with the July 2009 events have been denied due process and
the right to legal representation of their choice.  The authorities’
actions in this regard have included:  giving prosecutors and judges
special instructions on how to handle the July 5th cases; hand-picking
the judicial personnel assigned to the trials according to political
criteria; warning human rights lawyers against taking protest-related
cases; and making public statements that have put political pressure
on courts to mete out death sentences and other severe sentences.
•       The Xinjiang courts have arbitrarily sentenced 24 Uyghurs to death
and 9 Uyghurs to death with a two-year reprieve, for murder or other
crimes allegedly committed during the July 2009 events.  In addition,
many Uyghurs have been arbitrarily sentenced to life imprisonment and
varying jail terms.  All of the Uyghurs sentenced thus far were
sentenced after non-transparent trials plagued with the aforementioned
politicization and lack of due process.  The appellate courts have
upheld all of the sentences on which they have rendered decisions thus
far and have done so after non-transparent reviews.   Nine of the
Uyghurs sentenced to death were arbitrarily executed less than four
weeks after they were sentenced.
•       The authorities have conflated peaceful protest on July 5th with
rioting, which is consistent with the government’s routine
criminalization of Uyghurs’ peaceful exercise of freedom of
expression.  Official statements and state media reports have
suggested that some acts of peaceful protest would be formally
subjected to criminal prosecution.  An XUAR official acknowledged that
the authorities were holding in custody people who had protested
peacefully on July 5th.
•       The authorities have implemented an information blackout in the
region since July 2009, which among other things, has denied East
Turkestan residents internet and e-mail access and international phone
calling and text messaging capabilities.

I respectfully request that you issue a public statement calling on
China to:
•       Ensure that those accused of crimes related to the events of July
2009 are afforded due process, tried in an open and fair court, and
given access to legal representation of their choice;
•       Impose a moratorium on executions and on the imposition of death
sentences;
•       Immediately and unconditionally release all those who are only
alleged to have protested peacefully on July 5th;
•       End arbitrary detentions and provide a full account of all of the
detentions that have been carried out since July 5th, inform family
members of detainees’ whereabouts, and release detainees who have been
held without evidence;
•       Allow foreign media independent, unrestricted access to conduct
reporting throughout East Turkestan and to report on trials of
defendants accused of crimes related to the July 2009 events;
•       Allow an independent investigation into the July 2009 incidents and
invite the UN Secretary-General, the High Commissioner of Human
Rights, and various Special Rapporteurs and Independent Experts to
visit East Turkestan;
•       Restore complete internet/e-mail access and international phone
calling/text messaging capabilities in East Turkestan;
•       Address the root causes of the July 5th protest and the ethnic
unrest, including the severe political and religious repression and
economic discrimination to which Uyghurs are subjected and the
dilution of Uyghurs’ language and culture.

Thank you for your time and attention to these urgent matters.

Sincerely,

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