Radio Free Asia
September 25, 2015
China’s President Xi Jinping met with U.S. President Barack Obama at the White House in Washington Friday to discuss a variety of issues, including human rights, as protesters massed outside, calling on Beijing to end its oppression of minorities and dissidents.
In a joint press conference delivered after the meeting, Obama said the two leaders had held a “frank discussion” on human rights, reaffirming U.S. support for freedom of assembly and expression, freedom of the press and freedom of religion.
“I expressed in candid terms our strong view that preventing journalists, lawyers, NGOs and civil society groups from operating freely, or closing churches and denying ethnic minorities equal treatment are all problematic … and actually prevent China and its people from realizing its full potential,” he said.
Xi said China is making “all-around efforts to deepen comprehensive reform, to build law-based governance, [and] to enforce strict party discipline” in the interest of “building a society of initial prosperity in all respects.”
He said that while democracy and human rights “are the common pursuit of mankind … we must recognize that countries have different historical processes and realities, and we need to respect people of all countries in the right to choose their own development path independently.”
According to Xi, part of China’s reemergence as a global player requires achieving “social equity and justice, and advancing human rights,” and he expressed Beijing’s willingness to further conduct rights dialogue with the U.S. so that the two nations might “progress together.”
While disagreeing over China’s territorial ambitions in the South China Sea, Obama and Xi also agreed to measure to combat global warming and halt commercial cyber-theft and announced agreements with on a military hotline and rules of behavior to govern air-to-air encounters between the two powers military aircraft.
During the press conference, chants could be heard from about a block away from the South Lawn, where more than 200 pro-China supporters and anti-China protesters in two groups were separated from one another by metal barriers and police.
The supporters, consisting largely of Chinese students based in the U.S. and members of Chinese-American associations, waved Chinese and American flags and called out pro-China slogans, welcoming Xi to the U.S. capital.
The more animated protesters were made up of a variety of anti-Beijing organizations, including ethnic Uyghurs from northwestern China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, Tibetans and Chinese democracy campaigners.
One group of activists called China Rights Now carried a banner that said in large letters: “Xi Jinping Let Freedom Ring” with smaller letters underneath which read: “for Chinese, Tibetans, Uyghurs and Mongols.”
Oppressive policies
A group of Uyghurs shouted slogans calling for freedom and human rights and greater autonomy in the Xinjiang region, where members of their minority complain of pervasive ethnic discrimination, religious repression, and cultural suppression by China’s communist government.
Rebiya Kadeer, president of the Munich-based World Uyghur Congress, questioned why Xi was being invited to the White House when he is responsible for the “jailing of thousands and the killing of many others.”
“The Chinese government arrested thousands of people during the 2009 protests in [the Xinjiang capital] Urumqi and sentenced [outspoken Uyghur academic] Ilham Tohiti to life in prison,” she said.
“China has been carrying out its oppressive policies over the past 60 years, but when Xi rose to power, the number of forced disappearances and sentences without due process intensified. Today we call on China to release all political prisoners, including Uyghur, Tibetan and Chinese alike.”
T. Kumar, international advocacy director at London-based rights group Amnesty International, called on Obama to “give equal weight to human rights, along with business and tech issues” during his meeting with Xi, saying to steer clear of the issue would be “an extreme failure” for the U.S.
“We’re concerned about thousands of political prisoners in Xinjiang,” he said, as well as discrimination against Uyghurs in the region.
China has vowed to crack down on the “three evils” of terrorism, separatism, and religious extremism in Xinjiang, but experts outside China say Beijing has exaggerated the threat from Uyghur “separatists” and that domestic policies are responsible for an upsurge in violence that has left hundreds dead since 2012.
Uyghur groups in exile say such attacks are likely expressions of resistance to Beijing’s policies in Xinjiang, where rights groups accuse authorities of heavy-handed rule, including violent police raids on Uyghur households, restrictions on Islamic practices, and curbs on the culture and language of the Uyghur people.
A young Uyghur protester told RFA’s Uyghur Service that he wanted China to provide equal rights for the people of his ethnic group.
The Chinese government took away our fundamental rights and put so many Uyghurs in jail to suffer,” he said.
“I’m here to be the voice for those innocent people, and for those who suffered or even died for our freedom and human rights.”
Pressure on China
Also on Friday, Geng He, the U.S.-based wife of prominent rights lawyer Gao Zhisheng, questioned Washington’s commitment to human rights amid Xi’s visit to the White House, and suggested that her meetings with U.S. officials had only made his situation worse while he was in prison.
Two days earlier, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with relatives of several Chinese dissidents and civil society activists, though Geng refused to attend, citing a letter from her husband who said little would come of the talks while officials wine and dine Xi in Washington.
“In the years I have been here, I have been to DC no less than 10 times, and each time I have met with officials at different levels of government,” she told RFA Friday.
“I see them once a year, and each year they are higher ranking. I always thought that would mean my husband back home will have to put up with a bit less torture … [but] it seemed that it just got worse and worse every time, even to the point where he pretty much came back from the dead.”
Gao, 52, is currently under 24-hour surveillance by state security police at the home of his wife’s parents in Xinjiang, where he was released from a three-year jail term for “incitement to subvert state power” in August.
According to Gao’s friends, such as Beijing-based rights activist Hu Jia, the rights lawyer had barely been able to speak an entire sentence when he was first released from Xinjiang’s Shaya Prison, where he had been held for lengthy periods in solitary confinement and tortured.
Gao suffered psychological torture and various forms of corporal punishment, severely affecting his memory, and leaving his teeth in such bad shape that he was unable to chew, they said.
Reported by Adile for RFA’s Uyghur Service, and Ka Pa and Zhou Zinan for RFA’s Cantonese Service. Translated by Adile, Memetjan Juma and Luisetta Mudie. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.