2014-11-25
 
201411252c6922df-e17f-4af5-9361-c1ab3773ae44.jpeg (622×413)
Ilham Tohti chats with students on June 12, 2010 after a lecture at the Central University for Nationalities in Beijing.
 AFP
 
 
Chinese authorities in the troubled northwestern region of Xinjiang put on trial seven former students of jailed Uyghur scholar Ilham Tohti on “separatism’ charges on Tuesday, according to a top human rights lawyer.
 
“The trial of the seven students in the Ilham Tohti case has just wrapped up,” Beijing-based Li Fangping, one of Tohti’s defense team, said Tuesday in a post on his microblog.
 
“The verdict will be announced at a later date.”
 
Li wrote that one lawyer and two of the students had spoken in their defense and that all had pleaded “not guilty” to the charges against them.
 
Repeated calls to Li’s cell phone rang unanswered on Tuesday after the tweet was sent.
 
The one-day trial took place at the Intermediate People’s Court in Xinjiang’s regional capital, Urumqi, Reuters reported.
 
Tohti, a former professor at the Central University for Nationalities in Beijing, was sentenced to life in prison, along with deprivation of political rights and confiscation of all his assets, by the same court on Sept. 23.
 
He has repeatedly denied the charge and says the cases against him and his students are politically motivated.
 
Last Friday, the Urumqi High People’s Court rejected Tohti’s appeal against his sentence.
 
Shrouded in secrecy
 
But while Tohti’s trial received widespread media coverage, the trial of his students appears to have been deliberately shrouded in secrecy.
 
China’s tightly controlled state media made no mention of the case, and court, police and government officials in Urumqi all declined to answer inquiries from RFA about the case, saying they “weren’t clear about the situation.”
 
However, it is likely that the students named in Tohti’s case files as Muslim Uyghurs Perhat Halmurat, Shohret Tursun, Abdukeyum Ablimit, Mutellip Imin and Atikem Rozi, as well as ethnic minority Yi student Akebai’erheluoyuwei are among those on trial.
 
Li told Reuters the seven were charged with separatism, while at least three of them have confessed on state television that they worked for Tohti’s Uighur online (uighurbiz.net) website.
 
The website included articles critical of the ruling Chinese Communist Party’s policies targeting Uyghurs in Xinjiang, including systematic religious controls, the enforcement of Chinese-medium education in schools and lack of economic opportunity.
 
These criticisms were used by prosecutors in Tohti’s case as evidence that he had incited people to separatism and undermined “national unity,” lawyers said at the time.
 
Tohti, 45, had allegedly “bewitched and coerced young ethnic students” working on the website, prosecutors claimed.
 
But Tohti’s defense statement said he had “relied only on pen and paper to diplomatically request” human rights and legal rights for Uyghurs.
 
Prosecutors also made use of statements by his students in Tohti’s trial, which he rejected as having been drawn from them under extreme duress.
 
No more news
 
Tohti’s wife Guzelnur told RFA on Tuesday that she had received no more news of the students, none of whom has been officially named, since speaking with Perhat’s mother on Nov. 12.