China protests rights award won by jailed academic

Beijing slams UN official for attending ceremony in which Uighur scholar Ilham Tohti granted human rights defender award

By Mahmut Atanur

BEIJING (AA) – China expressed “strong dissatisfaction” Wednesday after imprisoned Uighur economist Ilham Tohti was chosen for the 2016 Martin Ennals Award for human rights defenders.

Tohti, 46, a former prominent economics lecturer at a Beijing university, was arrested in January 2014 accused of promoting the separation of Xinjiang -- China's most westerly province -- from China.

Xinjiang is home to a number of ethnic groups including the Uighur, a Turkic-speaking minority who make up 45 percent of the population.

United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein attended Tuesday’s ceremony in Geneva during which the award was presented to Tohti's son Ilham Cevher.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang criticized the granting of the award to the scholar, telling a press conference Wednesday that “Tohti’s criminal activity was supported by solid evidence.”

Geng also criticized the UN’s Zeid for attending the ceremony, saying that the move "severely goes against the principles and purposes of the UN Charter" and "interferes in China's domestic affairs".

Human rights organizations, activists and analysts have said that Uighur have been subject to religious, cultural and language restrictions, which have led them to flee China.

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