BFF-15 Malaysia frees 11 Uighurs, defying China handover request

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Malaysia frees 11 Uighurs, defying China handover request

KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 12, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Malaysia has freed 11 ethnic Uighur
Muslims who escaped from immigration detention in Thailand, their lawyer said
Friday, ignoring a request from Beijing to deport the group to China.

In the dramatic breakout last November, 25 members of the persecuted
minority used blankets to climb out of their cells in a daring pre-dawn
escape from immigration detention in southern Thailand.

Eleven of them, all men, escaped overland to neighbouring Malaysia, where
they were caught and charged with illegal entry.

Southern Thailand and Malaysia share a common border, which is easily
penetrable.

The group were freed and flew to Turkey on Tuesday, their lawyer Fahmi
Abdul Moin told AFP.

“Prosecutors decided to drop all charges on humanitarian grounds,” he said.

The decision was made after lawyers wrote to the Malaysian attorney general
urging that the charges be withdrawn, Fahmi added.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) welcomed the group’s release.

“These 11 men faced detention, torture or worse if they were returned to
China,” HRW deputy director for Asia Phil Robertson said.

China had asked Malaysia’s previous government to repatriate the group in
February, but new Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad has taken a more
independent stand with Beijing.

Since coming to power in May, Mahathir has cancelled more than $20 billion
worth of mega-infrastructure projects backed by Chinese firms, including rail
and gas pipelines.

Mahathir’s predecessor Najib Razak was seen as too friendly with Beijing.

Najib’s government last year deported to China 29 Uighurs it said were
involved with Islamic militants.

Uighurs are persecuted in western China, where they are subject to strict
regulations suppressing public displays of religion.

Over a million Uighur and other Muslim minority people have been detained
in re-education camps for offences as minor as making contact with family
members outside the country or sharing Islamic holiday greetings on social
media, the UN says.

Beijing has denied reports of the camps but evidence is mounting in the
form of government documents and testimonies from former detainees.

A scathing US congressional report released this month accused China of the
unprecedented repression of its ethnic minorities, including Uighurs, with
authoritarian tactics potentially constituting “crimes against humanity”.

BSS/AFP/GMR/1216 hrs