On October 5, 2022, Mr. Adiyaa
(shown as “Wu Guoxing” on his
Chinese passport), a Southern
Mongolian activist in exile who
has already obtained refugee
status from the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees,
was arrested by the Thai
immigration authorities at his
rented residency in suburban
Bangkok.
Immediately after the arrest,
Adiyaa was forced to meet with
Chinese embassy officials on
multiple occasions in a small
cell at the Bangkok Immigration
Detention Center, without any
Thai personnel present. Embassy
personnel accused Adiyaa of
“breaking Chinese relevant
laws,” including “illegally
occupying other’s property,” and
asked him to sign a letter of
“admittance to guilt and
willingness to return to China.”
Adiyaa refused to sign.
On October 19, four Chinese
State Security agents in uniform
visited the Detention Center
where Adiyaa is being held. One
agent identified himself as an
officer dispatched by the Inner
Mongolia Autonomous Region
Public Security Bureau. As
Adiyaa consistently refused to
sign the letter, the four agents
took turns repeatedly beating
him until he capitulated to
signing all the papers the
agents had prepared.
“It is all too clear that the
Thai Immigration Bureau is
ganging up with the Chinese
State Security authorities,
disregarding the United Nations
conventions on refugees and
human rights,” Adiyaa’s sister
Turgowaa told the Southern
Mongolian Human Rights
Information Center over the
phone. “My brother was already
given the UNHCR refugee
identification card and relevant
papers, but both the Chinese
Embassy and the Thai authorities
told him that the deportation
process is actively being worked
out.”
Adiyaa, 34 years old, is a
native Mongolian born in eastern
Southern Mongolia’s Horchin
Right Middle Banner. Escaping
persecution from China, he
arrived in Thailand in February
2021, crossing the border from
Cambodia along with seven other
family members.
Until four months before his
escape, Adiyaa had run a
Mongolian language training
center in Hohhot, the capital of
Southern Mongolia. There, he
taught Mongolian students the
Mongolian language and software
programming.
In September 2020, Adiyaa
actively participated in the
region-wide mass protest over
the Chinese Government’s
so-called “Second Generation
Bilingual Education Policy.” The
policy aims to completely erase
the Mongolian language from all
educational systems and social
life in Southern Mongolia.
On October 10, 2020, Adiyaa’s
training center was shut down as
an “illegal business.”
“Since then, all members of our
family have been subjected to
constant harassment by the local
police and State Security
authorities. Even I as a PhD
student researching Mongolian
traditional arts also had to
abandon my studies to leave
China,” Turgowaa told SMHRIC
over the phone from an
undisclosed location in
Bangkok.
According to Turgowaa, the case
of Adiyaa was brought to the
attention of the UNHCR office in
Bangkok.
“UNHCR officials visited my
brother in the Detention Center.
Yet my brother is still under
detention. We all can be
deported back to China at any
moment,” Turgowaa added.