CHINA / Regional |
Xinjiang Party head says Kadeer 'a separatist'(chinadaily.com.cn)Updated: 2007-01-08 09:27 A senior Party official in Xinjiang has denounced Rebiya Kadeer, now living the United States, as a separatist, saying she has no qualifications to be nominated for the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize.
As a mother who could not educate her own children well, Baikeli said, "it is beyond imagination that she could become the 'mother' of the Uygurs with a population of about 10 million." "The statements of Rebiya clearly show that she wants to destroy the peace and stability of Chinese society, this does not conform with the requirements of the Nobel Peace Prize," Nuer Baikeli said at the meeting of publicity chiefs. A netizen wrote his comment to the China News Service story, saying if such a person who tries to separate the country and favors violence were nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, it would be sarcastic to the title of the prize. She is a separatist monster. 56-year-old Rebiya was detained 1999 for endangering the national security. She went to the United States for medical treatment in March 2005 after promising to stay away from any separatist activities. She was also found to have engaged in trafficking in illegal drugs and engaging in illegal economic activities. Xinjiang officials also accused her of engaging in activities to try and
topple the central government and seeking Xinjiang's independence from China
through "violent terrorist activities," the service said. Rebiya Kadeer was born in 1951 in Xinjiang. She began to run a small business in Urumqi after the opening and reform policies in the late 1970s, and gradually built up her fortunate, said to worth of up to a billion yuan and one of the wealthiest women in Xinjiang. Investigations found the trade company, registered under her name and her children's names, dodged taxes amounting to more than 8 million yuan from 1994 and 2004. She was arrested in August 1999 for jeopardizing the national security, and was sentenced to eight years in prisoon for providing state secrets to overseas organizations. |
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