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Monday, November 18, 2024

Ilham Tohti, Uighur intellectual, top contender for European rights award

Ilham Tohti is an Uighur intellectual who has been nominated for a prestigious European award awarded to Human Rights activists. Along with him are Tajik human rights lawyer Buzurgmehr Yorov and a youth group promoting post-war reconciliation in the Balkans.

AFP |

Europe’s top rights body, the Council of Europe, has nominated a jailed academic from China’s Uighur minority, Ilham Tohti, for one of the continent’s top human rights awards.

The economics professor who was sentenced to life in prison in 2014 after being convicted of separatism, “has worked for over 20 years on the situation of the Uighur minority and on fostering inter-ethnic dialogue and understanding in China,” the Council’s parliamentary assembly said in a statement after meeting Monday in Prague.

Tohti is one of three nominees for the 2019 Vaclav Havel prize, along with Tajik human rights lawyer Buzurgmehr Yorov and a youth group promoting post-war reconciliation in the Balkans.

Previous winners of the Vaclav Havel prize, named after the late Czech dissident and former president, include Nobel laureate Nadia Murad, a Yazidi activist who survived torture and rape by the Islamic State

The winner of the 60,000-euro prize will be announced on September 30 in Strasbourg, home of the 47-country Council of Europe which founded the European Court of Human Rights.

Tohti has also been nominated by US lawmakers for the Nobel Peace Prize.

His nomination for the European prize comes as China’s treatment of the Uighurs – a Muslim, Turkic-speaking minority concentrated in China’s tightly-controlled northwestern Xinjiang region – comes under growing scrutiny.

Rights groups and experts say more than one million mostly Muslim ethnic minorities have been interned in re-education camps in Xinjiang.

Read more: Ai Weiwei To West: Tackle China On Human Rights Whatever The Cost

China initially denied the existence of the camps before later admitting to running what it called “vocational education centers”, which it presented as necessary to combat religious extremism and boost employment.

Last month, Beijing said, “most” of those being held had now returned home, without providing details.

Previous winners of the Vaclav Havel prize, named after the late Czech dissident and former president, include Nobel laureate Nadia Murad, a Yazidi activist who survived torture and rape by the Islamic State, and Oyub Titiyev, a Chechen rights activist who spent 18 months in a Russian jail.

AFP with additional input by GVS news desk