Washington(US): China sentenced an Uyghur educator and principal of a high school in Korla (Kuerle in Chinese) in northwestern China's Xinjiang region to 18 years in prison for inviting two Uyghur scholars to give presentations. Sherep Heyit organized and held a number of cultural events to which he invited well-known Uyghur intellectuals Yalqun Rozi and Abduqadir Jalalidin to give lectures, reported Shohret Hoshur, writing in Radio Free Asia (RFA).
The two intellectuals have been in prison since 2017, the year that Chinese authorities began detaining Uyghurs and other Turkic-speaking Muslims in a vast network of "re-education" camps in Xinjiang, purportedly to prevent religious extremism and terrorism. About 1.8 million people are believed to have been held in the camps, reported Shohret. According to Husenjan, a former student of Sherep's who now lives in exile said that he was detained by Chinese authorities in Korla about four years ago, but his sentence was not known.
"I learned his sentence term of 18 years through a Chinese friend in inner China," Husenjan said. "I was very saddened by this tragic news, but I was not surprised at all because it has been three or four years since he disappeared. "He was an elite intellectual," added Husenjan. Authorities have targeted teachers and intellectuals in Xinjiang because they are the brains of Uyghur society and the most significant means of passing on Uyghur culture and identity, Abdureshid Niyaz, an independent Uyghur researcher based in Turkey, told RFA in a 2021 report.
Also Read:International alliance of MPs calls for blacklisting of Chinese firms over Uyghur 'atrocities'