Caravanserai
Human Rights

Kazakhs speak out about illegal detentions in China's Xinjiang

AFP

Family members of Kazakh citizens are getting caught up in the sweeping arrests being made by Chinese authorities in Xinjiang, where more than 1.5 million ethnic Kazakhs live. They are now speaking out. [Alexander Platonov/AFPTV/AFP]

ALMATY -- When he looks back on his youth in China's far-west Xinjiang region, Akikat Kaliolla, an ethnic Kazakh, recalls the place's natural beauty and the big, colourful weddings typical of his majority-Muslim community.

But now Emin County, where he grew up, is a sealed-off pocket in a region experiencing a security crackdown on what Beijing calls separatist elements.

More than a million residents of that region are allegedly being held in a secretive network of extra-judicial, political re-education centres, according to a United Nations (UN) panel of experts.

In August, Beijing described the claims as "completely untrue".

Jenisnur Ayatkhan, husband of a Kazakh woman held in China for two years, speaks out about her ongoing detention. [AFP]

Jenisnur Ayatkhan, husband of a Kazakh woman held in China for two years, speaks out about her ongoing detention. [AFP]

Sayragul Sauytbay, 41, an ethnic Kazakh from China, awaits sentencing in Jarkent, Kazakhstan, July 13. Accused of illegally crossing the Chinese-Kazakh border to join her family in Kazakhstan, she received a suspended sentence August 1. Secretive "re-education camps" that allegedly hold hundreds of thousands of Muslims in western China became an issue during her trial. [Ruslan Pryanikov/AFP]

Sayragul Sauytbay, 41, an ethnic Kazakh from China, awaits sentencing in Jarkent, Kazakhstan, July 13. Accused of illegally crossing the Chinese-Kazakh border to join her family in Kazakhstan, she received a suspended sentence August 1. Secretive "re-education camps" that allegedly hold hundreds of thousands of Muslims in western China became an issue during her trial. [Ruslan Pryanikov/AFP]

Chinese Vice Premier Han Zheng (right) shakes hands with Kazakh First Deputy Prime Minister Askar Mamin in Beijing September 25. Allegations of human rights abuses against ethnic Kazakhs in China are testing Astana's relationship with Beijing. [Lintao Zhang/AFP]

Chinese Vice Premier Han Zheng (right) shakes hands with Kazakh First Deputy Prime Minister Askar Mamin in Beijing September 25. Allegations of human rights abuses against ethnic Kazakhs in China are testing Astana's relationship with Beijing. [Lintao Zhang/AFP]

People with rights

In an interview with AFP in Almaty, Kaliolla, a 34-year-old professional musician, said this year he'd lost contact with his mother, father and two younger brothers, who he believes were interned in one of the camps.

"What they are doing to people there, especially to my parents, is illegal," he said.

"They are not livestock but people with rights. Both of my parents are elderly and in ill health."

About 1.5 million ethnic Kazakhs live in Xinjiang, a region that borders Central Asia and has long been home to ethnic tensions.

They had until recently avoided the kind of state repression of which the mostly Muslim Uighurs, who make up the region's demographic majority, have long complained.

But Kaliolla is just one of many to have been separated from relatives across the border, as the Chinese authorities now train their sights on the ethnic Kazakhs.

He said that he knows of "around a hundred people" either interned in the camps or who have relatives in those camps.

"Lots of them are the same people I watched get married," he said.

His only contact with the missing family members in over six months was in August, when his brother got in touch at the request of Xinjiang authorities, he said.

He demanded that Kaliolla stop "speaking out imprudently" about their situation, as this would only bring them harm, he explained.

Kaliolla, who moved to Kazakhstan after meeting his future wife, a Kazakh citizen, at a music school in Xinjiang, said his family was targeted because his father spoke out against injustices perpetrated by police in Emin County.

"My father was a legal counsellor there. When the government began putting more and more pressure on the Kazakh people, he wrote an appeal to the central authorities in Beijing," he told AFP.

'Help us, please!'

Unlike Uighurs, many of whom say they face cultural and religious repression, Kazakhs had long moved freely between China and their historic homeland.

That freedom disappeared after hardline official Chen Quanguo, known for his control measures in Tibet, became the Xinjiang Communist Party chief in 2016.

China has pointed to a series of attacks in Xinjiang by suspected Islamist radicals in recent years as justification for the clampdown.

With concerns growing over the rights of the region's ethnic minorities, neighbouring Kazakhstan has inadvertently become the focus for those speaking out.

Kazakhstan's officials themselves have steadfastly refused to refer specifically to the camps, even after voicing concern over the situation.

But Kazakh nationals with relatives missing in Xinjiang have been more forthright, sharing stories of despair and separation at press conferences in Almaty.

"Eight months and no contact! Help us, please!" exclaimed one woman, Gaukhar Kurmanaliyeva, to reporters in August.

Kurmanaliyeva spoke of how her male cousin, a Kazakh citizen, was snatched by Chinese police at a shopping area at the border.

Her account was followed by that of Muratkhan Kasengazy, who said his wife -- another Kazakh passport holder -- had been held in China since December 2017 after going there for medical treatment.

In recent months, Kazakhstan risked China's wrath by refusing to deport an ethnic Kazakh woman of Chinese citizenship, who had confessed to crossing the border illegally to join her husband and children.

The woman, Sayragul Sauytbay, became an international media sensation after testifying in court that she had been forced by Beijing to work in a re-education camp, where, she said, 2,500 ethnic Kazakhs were interned.

Rare happy endings

Kazakh Foreign Minister Kairat Abdrakhmanov said in August that his country was in dialogue with Beijing over almost 700 cases of Kazakhs unable to leave China.

In some instances, the approach appears to have borne fruit.

Guzalnur Jeniskazy went to China to visit relatives in 2016, leaving her four-month-old daughter at home for what was meant to be a short trip.

But she ended up spending several months under house arrest and even a short stint in detention after losing her Kazakh passport, she told AFP correspondents who witnessed her emotional family reunion at an Almaty bus station in July.

"Thanks to the Kazakh consulate [in Urumqi] I was freed," she said, holding her daughter tightly pressed to her.

Such happy endings seem a rarity, however.

Dependent on China's economic largesse and seeking a pivotal role in its trillion-dollar trade and infrastructure drive, the oil-rich Central Asian country is poorly placed to make demands, analysts say.

"Kazakhstan's leverage over China is miserly," Aidos Sarym, an Almaty-based political scientist, told AFP.

"If China does not bend to the European Union and the United States, what can we say of Kazakhstan?"

Do you like this article?

0 Comment(s)

Comment Policy * Denotes Required Field 1500 / 1500