Mother’s Search for Son Triggers Prosecution in China
Human Rights Watch, 7 April 2016
By Sophie Richardson – Question: Where is it a crime for a mother to talk about her search for her missing son? Answer: In China.
Today in Urumqi, capital of the region home to the ethnically Turkic Uyghur people, a court tried Patigul Ghulam in closed proceedings on allegations of leaking state secrets. The prosecution appears to stem from local officials’ fury that in April 2013 she spoke to Radio Free Asia about her search for her son, Imammemet Ali.
Ali was one of an unknown number of men and boys whom the government forcibly disappeared in Urumqi following the July 2009 protests there. It’s still not clear how those protests, which began peacefully, turned violent. Then and now, Chinese authorities have the duty to thoroughly investigate incidents of violence and fairly prosecute the perpetrators. But instead of launching an impartial investigation in accordance with domestic law and international standards, Chinese law enforcement agencies carried out a massive campaign of arbitrary arrests in the Uyghur areas of Urumqi, resulting in dozens – and possibly many more – of “disappearances.”
Patigul Ghulam says that on July 14, 2009, police took away her son – then about 25 years old – and despite repeated inquiries to local authorities, she has never been given information about his whereabouts or wellbeing. Since then she has been briefly detained at least twice, once in 2011 and again in 2013, on vague allegations of “incitement” or “involvement in illegal activities.”
https://www.hrw.org/news/2016/04/07/dispatches-mothers-search-son-triggers-prosecution-china