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Congressional Executive Commission on China |
June 25, 2008 |
Washington D.C. |
Authorities in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region (IMAR) have
placed Mongolian rights activist and journalist Naranbilig under
house arrest after detaining him for 20 days in March and April,
according to reports from the U.S.-based Southern Mongolian
Human Rights Information Center (SMHRIC). Naranbilig had planned
to attend the United Nations (UN) Permanent Forum on Indigenous
Issues in New York when authorities intercepted his invitation
letter and detained him on March 23, according to an April 28
report from SMHRIC. Authorities
prevented Naranbilig from consulting with a lawyer while he was
detained, and his family members were not informed of the
grounds for his detention or of his whereabouts. Authorities
released Naranbilig on bail on April 23 and placed him under
house arrest for one year, according to the report. They also
confiscated his passport.
The SMHRIC connected Naranbilig's detention not only to his plan
to attend the Permanent Forum but also to his attendance in 2007
at other international forums promoting the rights of
pastoralists and mobile indigenous people, according to a
statement delivered by the SMHRIC at
the Permanent Forum. The Chinese government does not recognize
any populations within its borders as "indigenous peoples" as
defined under international law. (For an example of Chinese
policy on this matter, see. e.g., a 1997
statement by the Chinese delegation to
the 53rd session of the UN Commission on Human Rights, via the
Web site of the Embassy of the People's Republic of China in
Switzerland.) Naranbilig's detention also stemmed from his
broader activities writing articles advocating ethnic minority
rights and criticizing Chinese policies toward ethnic Mongols,
according to the SMHRIC statement. (For more information on
government policy toward Mongols, see Christopher P. Atwood's
statement at the 2005 CECC roundtable on
China's Ethnic Regional Autonomy Law: Does it Protect Minority
Rights?, as well as the
Special Focus section on ethnic
minorities in the Congressional-Executive Commission on China
2005
Annual Report.) Authorities also have
detained and imprisoned other ethnic Mongols who have promoted
ethnic minority rights. In March, authorities detained, and
later placed under house arrest, activist Tsebegjab for his
interaction with overseas Mongolian activists, according to the
April 28 report. Bookstore owner
Hada
continues to serve a 15-year sentence for "splittism" and
"espionage" after he organized peaceful protests for ethnic
rights in the IMAR capital of Hohhot.
Naranbilig's detention came at a period of increased government
repression of citizen activism, especially by ethnic minorities,
in the run-up to the Olympic Games and amid protests in Tibetan
and
Uighur areas of China. His detention
also came amid the recent detention and imprisonment of several
other fellow writers. (See, for example, CECC analyses on
Lu Gengsong and Wang Dejia (1,2.)
For more information on conditions in the IMAR, see Section
II--Ethnic Minority Rights, in the CECC 2007
Annual Report (via the Government
Printing Office Web site). For more information on restrictions
against writers, see Section II--Freedom of Expression in the
2007 Annual Report.
Source:
-See Summary (2008-06-03 / English) | Posted on: 2008-06-25
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