Mandatory Lockdown Ordered in Ghulja Amid COVID Surge in Northern Xinjiang

Authorities in northwestern China’s Xinjiang region have implemented comprehensive coronavirus prevention measures and a mandatory lockdown of residents in Ghulja in response to a new outbreak during a peak tourism period, prompting concern by Uyghurs that their families will find it harder to make ends meet.

Locals in Ghulja (in Chinese, Yining), a city in far northern Xinjiang near Kazakhstan, have taken to social media to express their concern about the COVID-19 measures inflicting more hardship on them given that many families have already been devastated by the impact of China’s system of internment camps that have deprived them of their breadwinners.

Though over 70 percent of China’s population of 1.4 billion people has been fully vaccinated, the country is struggling to contain sporadic outbreaks of the highly contagious Delta variant of the virus.

Health officials in Ghulja began conducting citywide nucleic-acid testing, a type of diagnostic test that directly detects the virus, in early October after two asymptomatic infections were found in Qorghas (Huocheng), about 90 kilometers (56 miles) west of Ghulja, China’s state-run Global Times reported.

Officials closed Ghulja’s expressway on Oct. 3 and suspended rail travel and flights, advising travelers to wait inside hotels until they were tested, the report said. They also have imposed an indefinite lockdown on city residents.

The move came amid China’s Golden Week public holiday from Oct. 1 to Oct. 7 during which hundreds of millions of people were expected to travel domestically. Many Chinese remained at home, however, because government officials advised against unnecessary travel and gatherings to prevent further COVID-19 virus outbreaks.

Health authorities in Ghulja told RFA that they are monitoring the situation but that they could not disclose the number of people infected with the virus as they had done at the beginning of 2020.

“It can’t be reported,” one official told RFA.

Chinese media outlets meanwhile are reporting on the situation not based on medical information, but rather according to the directives of the ruling Communist Party’s Propaganda Department.

‘Be brave, my people of Ghulja’

Measures implemented during the health crisis in Xinjiang have affected the region’s 12 million Uyghurs more than they have the Han Chinese who live there, Uyghur sources told RFA.

The Han Chinese population in Xinjiang enjoys the special protection of the Chinese state, they said, though Uyghur families face daily financial hardship trying to eke out a living with many adults now held in internment camps.

China has held up to 1.8 million Uyghurs and others in the camps since 2017, while dismissing widely documented evidence that it has mistreated Muslims living inside and outside the camps — including testimony from former detainees and guards describing widespread abuses in interviews with RFA and other media outlets.

With the vast majority of the workforce now in camps and prisons, residents who need laborers for maintenance and building work have expressed apprehension that the indefinite COVID-19 lockdown will make their lives even more difficult.

“Be brave, my people of Ghulja, who have been trapped in their homes since October 3rd. … Especially the businesspeople who depend on daily income. Be patient, there is wisdom in everything,” wrote one Uygur resident on social media.

Residents in Ghulja’s Khorgos Mazar, Jelilyuzi, Onyar, and Dongmazar districts told RFA by phone that their doors have been locked from the outside and they have been trapped in their homes for at least a week.

“The doors are locked, sealed, and we are sitting at home without leaving,” said one resident.

Because authorities have ordered no information about the situation to be released during the lockdown, most residents said that the sudden imposition of stay-at-home orders has made it impossible for them to go out and shop for food.

The inability of most residents to move around, or even to go outside into their front yards and backyards, indicates the severity of the restrictions, they said.

Residents also complained that the unexpected lockdown has barred them from going to work and from accessing routine medical care.

Threats of ‘training centers’

The head of one 10-family unit — a social structure set up by Chinese authorities in early 2017 to maintain control over Uyghurs by making one person responsible for each group — said that the strict implementation of lockdown rules, along with a warning that those who violate the rules would be taken to “training centers,” have terrorized local residents.

“If we lack food, we need to go get food, but now we can’t do this because it’s breaking the rules,” he said.

One village Communist Party secretary in Ghulja said officials told residents not to leave their homes.

“We have told them that they should know that if they violate the rules, we will hand them over to the authorities, and the authorities will send them to ‘training,’” he said.

Because of the lockdown, a pensioner in the Ghulja village of Qash had been unable to take two cows with an unidentified disease to a veterinary hospital or to call a veterinarian.

“He told me his two cows are dead,” said head of the 10-family unit. “They would have been saved if a veterinarian could have come.”

Instead, the two pedigree cows, which were the pensioner’s main source of income to provide for the 12 children of his three sons detained in internment camps, died in the cowshed, he said.

Other Uyghur families, especially those who have had to rely on charity and community donations, said they now facing food shortages and possible starvation under the lockdown.

A Jelilyuzi district resident, who is facing a food shortage, told RFA that there were many more people in the community like him who were in the same situation.

“Instead of eating three meals a day, we now eat only one meal a day,” he said. “There are many others like us in this neighborhood.”

Reported by Shohret Hoshur for RFA’s Uyghur Service. Translated by the Uyghur Service. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin.

Cambodia’s Hun Sen Orders Arrest of Exiled Activist Over Poetry

Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen has ordered the arrest of a former monk and forestry activist living in exile who shared a disparaging poem about the country’s strongman on social media, RFA has learned.

Voeun Veasna currently resides in neighboring Thailand. A Khmer Times report on Oct. 11 described him as a 35-year-old activist affiliated with the banned opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP).

On Oct. 9, Voeun Veasna used his Facebook account under the name Kranhoung Preylang to post a poem titled ‘Hun Sen is a Traitor’ on the prime minister’s own Facebook page. The poem criticized Sen for amending Cambodia’s constitution, thereby “destroying the country.”

The poem also accused Hun Sen of allowing Cambodia’s forests to be destroyed during his rule.

Hun Sen quickly responded to Voeun Veasna’s poem, calling it an expression of “extremist theory,” and called for his arrest, according to the Khmer Times report.

“Now there are extremist rebels left that need to be eliminated for peace to be maintained,” the report quoted Hun Sen as saying.

Hun Sen said that he hoped the police would track Voeun Veasna down, whether he was inside or outside the country. 

Speaking from exile in Thailand, Voeun Veasna told RFA’s Khmer Service that his opinion on Hun Sen remains unchanged.

“I commented on Hun Sen’s Facebook because ever since I was born, I have not seen Hun Sen do anything to benefit his country and his people,” he said.

“Hun Sen has looked the other way as his powerful friends… stole land from the people. People are crying throughout the country, but Hun Sen has ignored them.”

The former monk said that his poem reveals the truth of Hun Sen’s leadership, andthat he plans to continue speaking out against the strongman.  

“I am concerned about my security, but I don’t know what to do when this regime likes bloodshed,” he said.

Even though Hun Sen ordered his arrest this week, Voeun Veasna said that the Phnom Penh Municipal Court had already charged him with incitement in May and ordered his arrest. He said he would be arrested if he were to return to Cambodia.

Hun Sen, as a public figure, is not immune from criticism, and the government’s role should be to educate the public rather than punish them for their political opinions, Soeung Sengkaruna, spokesperson for the local ADHOC NGO told RFA.

“Our country is not open to criticism and has taken many actions against expression,” he said. 

Cambodia’s Supreme Court dissolved the CNRP in November 2017, two months after arresting its president Kem Sokha over an alleged plot to overthrow the government. Scores of supporters of the group have since been incarcerated, awaiting a tortuous legal process made slower by COVID-19 restrictions.

The move came amid a wider crackdown by Hun Sen on the country’s political opposition, independent media, and NGOs that allowed the CPP to win all 125 seats in parliament in a July 2018 election and drew U.S. sanctions and the suspension of trade privileges with the European Union.

Reported by RFA’s Khmer Service. Translated by Samean Yun. Written in English by Eugene Whong.

Tibet’s Exile Parliament Names Three Women to Cabinet Posts

Tibet’s exile parliament in an historic move on Monday voted three women into positions in the Kashag, or cabinet, of the Dharamsala, India-based exile government, the Central Tibetan Administration.

The vote in the 17th parliament’s first session followed an impasse over the seating of 45 new parliamentarians elected in an April 11 vote held in Tibetan communities worldwide.

Controversy over the validity of the oaths of office taken by two separate groups had stalled the legislature’s business for four months, and was ended only following the intervention of exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama.

Presiding over Monday’s meeting, Penpa Tsering—now Sikyong, or political leader, of the exile government—proposed six nominations for the post of Kalon, or cabinet minister, and three women were quickly voted in.

Gyari Dolma, a former minister and deputy speaker of the House; Tharlam Dolma, a former school principal; and Norzin Dolma, a former researcher at the Dharamsala-based Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy, will now serve in the CTA cabinet, each with responsibility for one of the government’s departments.

The new Kalons’ specific assignments will be made at a later date.

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Tharlam Dolma, Gyari Dolma, and Norzin Dolma are shown left to right.

After 19 members staged a walkout Monday over the nomination of one MP, Ngodup Dorjee, over questions of incompetence, Tsering in a meeting next day withdrew his other nominations, moving discussion of their candidacy to a later date.

“In order to uphold the importance of this first session, I will withdraw the remaining nominations until the next session,” Tsering said. “And I therefore request the members of parliament to respect the proceedings of the House next time.”

The Tibetan parliament in exile meets twice a year, once in March to discuss the CTA budget and once in September to discuss reports from each of the government’s departments.

Formerly an independent nation, Tibet was invaded and incorporated into China by force 70 years ago, following which the Dalai Lama and thousands of his followers fled into exile in India and other countries around the world.

Chinese authorities maintain a tight grip on the Tibetan region, restricting Tibetans’ political activities and peaceful expression of cultural and religious identity, and subjecting Tibetans to persecution, torture, imprisonment, and extrajudicial killings.

The Tibetan diaspora is estimated to include about 150,000 people living in 40 countries, mainly India, Nepal, North America, and in Europe.

Reported by Lobsang Gelek for RFA’s Tibetan Service. Translated by Tenzin Dickyi. Written in English by Richard Finney.

Jailed Uyghur Denied Scheduled Release, Served ‘Golden Years’ in Chinese Custody

A Uyghur who served 15 years in prison on unknown charges in northwestern China’s Xinjiang region was not released when his sentence ended in June, and his family has no knowledge of his whereabouts, according to sources with knowledge of the situation.

Ilham Iminjan, 36, is the second-oldest male in a family of five sons, four of whom have been detained by authorities.

He was scheduled for release on June 22, but did not return to his family in Chapchal Xibe (in Chinese, Chabuchaer Xibo) county in the Ili Kazakh (Yili Hasake) Autonomous Prefecture, said a classmate of the man’s detained brother Arkin.

“The family expected him to come back home on June 22, but he did not return, and no notice has been received regarding an extension of his jail term,” the source told RFA.

“Ilham Iminjan was jailed when he was 21,” he said. “The entire golden period of his life was spent in prison. The family had planned to let him marry as soon as he was released.”

In early October, a Chapchal Xibe county official also told RFA that Ilham had not been released and “has not returned to the community.”

“I have not seen him in these past months or years,” he said.

An official from the village in Jaghistay township where Ilham’s family lives, also confirmed the man had not been released from prison in Chapchal county.

“They called from the prison and said he would be released in a few months or so, but he has not yet been released,” he told RFA.

Another county official did not answer RFA’s question as to why Ilham had not been released despite having completed his sentence. He also did not respond to a request for general comment on the numbers of detainees released.

Ilham’s older brother, Memetjan, 40, was sentenced to 18 years in prison in 2018.

His younger brother, Arkin, 33, served a six year-sentence from 2009 to 2015 for disrupting public order and attempting to “divide the country” by having “illegal materials” on his cell phone, his former schoolmate told RFA in an earlier report.

Arkin was detained a second time in 2017 as a former prisoner and served two years in an internment camp. He was then jailed again this September because of a phone call he had received from a “marked” person, according to the former classmate.

The second youngest son, Enwer, 27, was sentenced to six years in prison this June.

China has held up to 1.8 million Uyghurs and others in “re-education” camps since 2017, while dismissing widely documented evidence that it has mistreated Muslims living inside and outside the camps – including testimony from former detainees and guards describing widespread abuses in interviews with RFA and other media outlets.

China has said that the camps vocational training facilities where Uyghurs and other Turkic people learn skills in an effort to prevent religious extremism and terrorism in the region, where about 12 million mostly Muslim Uyghurs live.

The Jaghistay village official did not deny that the four sons from one family were in state custody, but declined to provide details of the specific circumstances of Ilham and his brothers, including their sentences.

“I know that the sons of the family have not shown up for long time, but I have no idea where they are now and when they will be back in our community,” he said. “I can assume that some of them are serving jail terms and some are in a training center.”

Most of the Uyghurs and members of other Turkic minority groups arrested in Xinjiang in the past four years have not been released, while many of those who were have been rearrested and sent to internment camps because they were former prisoners, according to sources in the region. Those who completed their sentences have almost never returned to their families.

In a 2017 report, Xinjiang authorities explained why former prisoners should be rearrested, arguing that Uyghurs arrested in the aftermath of violent unrest in Xinjiang’s capital Urumqi (Wulumuqi) on July 5, 2009, had been released from prison in the following years.

Because former detainees and their relatives might contemplate revenge, authorities said, “‘training centers’ have been set up under the guise of clearing religious extremism, and those in the ‘centers’ have been detained only to maintain stability even if they have not committed any crime,” Qiu Yuanyuan, a researcher at the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region’s Party School, said in the report.

Reported by Shohret Hoshur for RFA’s Uyghur Service. Translated by the Uyghur Service. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin.

Danish Artist Tries to Reclaim Tiananmen Tribute From Hong Kong University

A Danish artist is trying to reclaim his sculpture commemorating the victims of the 1989 Tiananmen massacre, as a deadline issued for its removal from the University of Hong Kong campus passed on Wednesday.

Jens Galschiøt, whose nightmarish “Pillar of Shame” sculpture in copper featuring entwined, naked people crying out in anguish has stood on the HKU campus for 24 years, said he had hired a lawyer to write to the university after it insisted the sculpture be removed by the now-disbanded Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China.

The Alliance, many of whose leaders now face charges of “colluding with foreign powers” under a draconian national security law imposed on Hong Kong by the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP), released details of a letter it had received from Chicago-based law firm Mayer Brown on the HKU’s behalf on Friday.

Galschiøt told RFA that he isn’t being given enough time to remove the sculpture, and that he wants to direct the process of dismantling and removal himself.

He said it was impossible to complete the job in such a short space of time, and that the sculpture was only on loan to the Alliance.

Mayer Brown’s letter demanded the removal of the “Pillar of Shame” by 5:00 p.m. local time on Wednesday, although no immediate action was taken as the deadline passed.

An attack on art

“We are still seeking legal advice and working with related parties to handle the matter in a legal and reasonable manner,” the university said in a statement quoted by Hong Kong government broadcaster RTHK.

“This sculpture is very important to Hong Kong. It is a symbol of June 4th,” Galschiøt told RFA. “It also represents the fact that while Hong Kong has become a part of China, Hong Kong people still have the right to remember their own stories and have the right to lay flowers at the monument to mourn those who died in 1989.”

He said the order to remove it was an attack on art, and on the memory of the June 4, 1989 massacre by the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) that put an end to weeks of student-led pro-democracy protests and hunger strikes on Tiananmen Square and other Chinese cities.

Galschiøt told the AP that his lawyers have contacted the authorities at HKU in a bid to reach a settlement on the fate of the sculpture.

“Hong Kong has completely changed,” he told RFA. “Looking at the situation in Hong Kong from Europe feels very sad.”

“All the rights that China promised to the Hong Kong people have been taken away,” he said. “Now … they are transferring everything that is bad about [mainland] China to Hong Kong and suppressing freedom of speech.”

Galschiøt said he hoped for a better future for young people, and quoted the inscription on the Pillar of Shame: “Empires pass away but art persists. The old cannot kill the young forever.”

Civil society targeted

The 32-year-old Alliance stands accused of acting as the agent of a foreign power, with leaders Chow Hang-tung, Albert Ho, and Lee Cheuk-yan arrested on suspicion of “incitement to subvert state power,” and the group’s assets frozen.

The group is the latest in string of civil society groups to disband following investigation by national security police under the national security law that took effect from July 1, 2020.

China and the Hong Kong government have moved swiftly to erase the large gap between the CCP-ruled mainland and the former British colony in civil and political rights, as well as media and academic freedom.

The annual Tiananmen vigils the Alliance hosted on June 4 often attracted more than 100,000 people, but the gatherings have been banned since 2020, with the authorities citing coronavirus restrictions.

China’s Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office says the Alliance incited hostility and hatred against the CCP and the central government.

Translated and edited by Luisetta Mudie.

Planet Water Foundation Announces Major Activation Around Handwashing in Conjunction With Global Handwashing Day

Handwashing facilities, hygiene education and clean water access provided across 20 communities in six countries in month of action

Planet Water Foundation handwashing project in Pune, India. October 2021

Planet Water Foundation handwashing project in Pune, India. October 2021

PHOENIX, Oct. 13, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) —  Planet Water Foundation, a leading non-profit organization that addresses global water poverty by delivering clean water access and hygiene education programs, announces the launch of a major activation around handwashing, during which they will be deploying handwashing facilities and handwashing education programming to communities in need, alongside their community water filtration systems.

In conjunction with Global Handwashing Day, which takes place on October 15, Planet Water and its donor partners are engaging in a month of action across six countries – Cambodia, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Philippines and Vietnam. Recipient communities in these countries are each receiving an AquaTower community water filtration system, which includes integrated handwashing stations to make handwashing convenient and frequently practiced. Each project is deployed with one year’s supply of liquid hand soap, together with Planet Water’s Hygiene Education program, which teaches about germs and how they spread, the importance of how and when to wash hands with soap, and healthy hygiene habits to create a change in behavior and knowledge around water-health and hygiene.

Enhancing the educational side of this activation in India, Planet Water has collaborated with long-standing partner Sesame Workshop India (SWI). As part of the partnership, SWI is further amplifying the messaging on handwashing in India through its online platforms with educational content and activities featuring Elmo and other well-known Muppets.

“With handwashing becoming increasingly important due to the ongoing pandemic, we felt it was imperative that we help increase awareness of the need for handwashing across the communities in which we operate, and to provide people with the tools and knowledge to make handwashing something they can practice routinely,” said Mark Steele, CEO and Founder of Planet Water Foundation. “Handwashing has been a key part of our hygiene education program for over 10 years, and thanks to the support of our donor partners, we are pleased to be able to make such a positive contribution with this activation.”

Project supporters this year include Xylem, Watts Water Technologies, Inc., The Starbucks Foundation, SWM International, Freudenberg, and Columbia Sportswear.

About Planet Water Foundation

Planet Water Foundation is a non-profit organization focused on bringing clean water to the world’s most impoverished communities through the installation of community-based water filtration systems and the deployment of hygiene education programs. Planet Water Foundation projects are focused on children, schools, and rural/peri-urban communities across Asia and Latin America. Since 2009, Planet Water has deployed more than 1,500 projects that provide clean water access to more than two million people across 15 countries. For more information, visit www.planet-water.org.

Media contact: John Deotrakul (john@planet-water.org)

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Image 1: Planet Water Foundation handwashing project in Pune, India. October 2021

Planet Water Foundation is providing handwashing facilities, hygiene education and clean water access to 20 communities across six countries as part of their activation around Global Handwashing Day.

This content was issued through the press release distribution service at Newswire.com.

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