APF photo This undated handout photo shows ethnic Mongolian dissident Hada (center), his wife and fellow activist Xinna (left), and son Uiles (right). |
Police in Hohhot detain an imprisoned activist’s wife and question his son.
Authorities in
China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous
Region have detained the wife of an
imprisoned ethnic rights activist
and raided their bookstore ahead of
his release in an apparent bid to
check any unrest.
Xinna, 55, was detained in a raid on
the Mongolian Studies Bookstore in
the provincial capital Hohhot on
Saturday, six days before her
husband Hada’s scheduled release.
Hada, 54, has served 15 years in
prison on charges of “splittism” and
“espionage.”
“Because Hada’s release date is
approaching, the Chinese authorities
are trying to silence any public
opinion and so-called disturbance or
possible unrest among Mongolians,”
said Enhebatu Togochog, a spokesman
for the Southern Mongolian Human
Rights Information Center (SMHRIC),
a New York-based group.
Police from Hohhot’s Saihan district
carried out the raid, confiscating
hundreds of books, CDs, souvenirs,
and the store’s account book and
computer. It was the third raid on
the store in a week.
Xinna had opened the bookstore with
her husband before his arrest. She
has spoken out about her husband’s
situation and in support of Charter
08, a pro-democracy manifesto
co-authored by imprisoned Chinese
Nobel Laureate Liu Xiaobo.
Police informed the couple’s son,
Uiles, that Xinna is being held at
the Inner Mongolia No. 1. Detention
Center. The grounds given for her
detention were “illegal management”
of the bookstore.
Activist to be released this week
Xinna told AFP earlier this month
that she had not been allowed to
visit her husband since April.
Hada was imprisoned in 1995 after
organizing peaceful protests in
Hohhot for Mongolians’ ethnic
rights. His sentence included a
four-year ban on political activity
after his release.
Hada was a founder of the Southern
Mongolian Democratic Alliance, an
organization which later set out its
mission as “opposing colonization by
the Han people and striving for
self-determination, freedom and
democracy in Southern [Inner]
Mongolia.”
Some ethnic Mongolian rights
activists refer to the province of
Inner Mongolia as Southern Mongolia
in reference to the Republic of
Mongolia on its northern border.
Mongolians are a recognized ethnic
minority in China and number around
6 million according to government
statistics.
Son “spread word”
While the police raided the
bookstore, Hada and Xinna’s son
Uiles left the bookstore’s warehouse
where he had been working and went
to an Internet café.
From there, he contacted the foreign
media and overseas Mongolian rights
groups.
According to the SMHRIC, police
found Uiles at the Internet café and
brought him to the local police
station for questioning on Saturday.
The deputy director of the Hohhot
police wanted Uiles to sign an
agreement not to disseminate
information about his family, to
sever ties with his parents, and to
not carry out “separatist”
activities, according to SMHRIC.
The deputy director also promised to
help find Uiles a nice job and
various personal benefits in
exchange for his cooperation.
Uiles was allowed to leave the
police station later that evening,
but the next day was brought to the
local public security bureau, where
authorities confiscated his cell
phone while he was on the line with
a foreign media outlet, according to
SMHRIC’s spokesman.
“The authorities are just afraid of
Xinna and Uiles because they were
interviewed by foreign news media
and they were talking about the
situation to the news media and
human rights organizations,” the
spokesman said.
Supporters targeted
Authorities also recently held under
house arrest an ethnic Mongolian
dissident writer who had been
working to organize a rally to
welcome Hada upon his release.
Govruud Huuchinhuu, a writer,
activist and member of the Southern
Mongolian Democratic Alliance (SMDA),
was detained by Horchin district
police in the city of Tongliao on
Nov. 11.
"I wrote on my blog that I planned
to go and visit him, to meet him on
his release," she in an interview.
"They probably detained me under
house arrest ahead of time, for fear
that I would spread the news
around," she said.
Reported by
RFA's Mandarin Service and Rachel
Vandenbrink.