US urges China to release Uygur academic Ilham Tohti
US State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki calls on Beijing to "guarantee him the protections and freedoms to which he’s entitled under China’s international human rights commitments".
The United States on Wednesday urged China to free a prominent Uygur academic who faces charges that could carry the death penalty after criticising government policy.
The US was “deeply concerned” for Ilham Tohti, an economics lecturer in Beijing who was charged following more than a month of detention, said State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki.
“We call on Chinese authorities to release Mr Tohti and to guarantee him the protections and freedoms to which he’s entitled under China’s international human rights commitments, including the freedom of expression,” Psaki told reporters in Washington.
Tohti has emerged as one of the most visible critics of China’s policy toward the Uygurs, a mostly Muslim ethnic group concentrated in the western Xinjiang region, where tensions have mounted in recent years.
He has warned against stigmatising Uygurs after a series of violent incidents.
Tohti, whose initial arrest was also condemned by the United States and European Union, was formally accused of separatism, a charge that could carry the death penalty.