Skip to main content
U.S. flag
An official website of the United States government    Here's how you know
Español
Multilingual Resources
Official Government Website

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure Website

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( A locked padlock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

U.S. Department of Homeland Security Seal, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
 
Sign In  
Access USCIS online services.
  • Sign In
  • Create Account
Sign In
Create Account
  • Topics

    • Family

      • Family of Green Card Holders (Permanent Residents)
      • Family of Refugees and Asylees
      • Family of U.S. Citizens
    • Adoption

      • Before You Start
      • Immigration through Adoption
    • Military

      • Citizenship for Military Family Members
      • Naturalization Through Military Service
    • Humanitarian

      • Humanitarian Parole
      • Refugees and Asylum
      • Temporary Protected Status
    • Visit the U.S.

      • Change My Nonimmigrant Status
      • Extend Your Stay
    • Working in the United States

      • Permanent Workers
      • Temporary (Nonimmigrant) Workers
    • Avoid Scams

      • Common Scams
      • Find Legal Services
      • Report Immigration Scams
    • Careers at USCIS

      • Career Opportunities
      • Special Hiring Programs
  • Forms

    • Most Accessed Forms

      • I-485, Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status
      • I-765, Application for Employment Authorization
      • I-90, Application to Replace Permanent Resident Card (Green Card)
      • N-400, Application for Naturalization
    • All Forms

    • File Online

    • Family Based Forms

      • I-129F, Petition for Alien Fiancé(e)
      • I-130, Petition for Alien Relative
      • I-360, Petition for Amerasian, Widow(er), or Special Immigrant
      • I-600, Petition to Classify Orphan as an Immediate Relative
      • I-751, Petition to Remove Conditions on Residence
    • Employment Based Forms

      • I-9, Employment Eligibility Verification
      • I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker
      • I-140, Immigrant Petition for Alien Workers
      • I-526, Immigrant Petition by Standalone Investor
      • I-539, Application to Extend/Change Nonimmigrant Status
    • Humanitarian Based Forms

      • I-134A, Online Request to be a Supporter and Declaration of Financial Support
      • I-589, Application for Asylum and for Withholding of Removal
      • I-730, Refugee/Asylee Relative Petition
      • I-821, Application for Temporary Protected Status
  • Newsroom

    • All News

      • Alerts
      • Fact Sheets
      • News Releases
    • Media Contacts

    • Multimedia Gallery

    • Social Media Directory

    • Speeches, Statements, Testimony

  • Citizenship

    • Learners

      • Apply for Citizenship
      • Learn About Citizenship
      • Naturalization Test and Study Resources
    • Educators

      • Educational Products for Educators
      • Resources for Educational Programs
      • Teacher Training Sessions
    • Organizations

      • Outreach Tools
      • Civic Integration
      • Interagency Strategy for Promoting Naturalization
      • Naturalization-Related Data and Statistics
    • Grants

      • Learn About the Citizenship and Integration Grant Program
      • Success Stories from Grant Recipients
  • Green Card

    • Green Card Processes and Procedures

      • Adjustment of Status
      • After We Grant Your Green Card
      • Employment Authorization Document
      • Visa Availability and Priority Dates
    • Green Card Eligibility Categories

    • How to Apply for a Green Card

    • Replace Your Green Card

    • While Your Green Card Application Is Pending with USCIS

  • Laws

    • Legislation

      • Immigration and Nationality Act
    • Class Action, Settlement Notices and Agreements

    • Unlawful Presence and Inadmissibility

    • Policy Manual

    • Regulations

    • Administrative Appeals

  • Tools

    • Self-Help Tools

      • Check Case Processing Times
      • Case Status Online
      • Change of Address
      • E-Request
      • Password Resets and Technical Support
    • Website Resources

      • Archive
      • A-Z Index
      • Website Policies
    • Additional Resources

      • Explore my Options
      • Immigration and Citizenship Data
      • Multilingual Resource Center
      • USCIS Tools and Resources
  • Contact us
  • Multilingual Resources
Main navigation
Skip to main content
  • Archive
Breadcrumb
  1. Home
  2. Archive
  3. RIC Query - China (10 October 2002)

RIC Query - China (10 October 2002)

Archived Content

The information on this page is out of date. However, some of the content may still be useful, so we have archived the page.


China

 

 

Response to Information Request Number:CHN03001.REF
Date:October 10, 2002
Subject:China: Information on Islamic Reformist Party or Islamic Isalahatcilar
From:INS Resource Information Center
Keywords:China / Ethnic minorities / Extrajudicial executions / Opposition leaders / Political parties / Political violence / Religious minorities

 

 

Query:

Provide information on a group in China¿s Xinjiang region called either the Islamic Reformist Party or Islamic Isalahatcilar.

Response:

SUMMARY

Chinese officials in the 1990s executed or jailed several Uighur Muslims for alleged links to a group called the Islamic Reformist Party in China¿s northwestern Xinjiang region, according to Amnesty International. As part of its recent efforts to link Uighur separatism in Xinjiang to pan-Islamic terrorism, Beijing in 2002 blamed the Islamic Reformist Party ¿ among other Uighur groups ¿ for what it called terrorist acts in Xinjiang in the early 1990s.

The Resource Information Center found little information on the Islamic Reformist Party¿s aims, activities, or membership.

The RIC also found no references to an Islamic Isalahatcilar group.

BACKGROUND

At least seven men were executed in the mid-1990s for alleged links to the Islamic Reformist Party, according to a May 1995 public notice in Xinjiang obtained by Amnesty International and detailed in an April 1999 report (AI 1 Apr 1999). The notice, posted in a court in the Xinjiang city of Urumqi, announced that five young Uighurs had been executed in a single day for being members of the Islamic Reformist Party and planting bombs in the city in 1992. The notice also referred to another alleged Islamic Reformist Party member, Mahammat Yunus, along with the note, ¿already shot dead¿ (AI 1 Apr 1999). A seventh alleged Islamic Reformist Party member, a Uighur named Obulkasim Yusuf, was also listed as having been ¿shot dead¿ (AI 1 Apr 1999).

Amnesty International said that it received a written account from a Uighur prisoner stating that Obulkasim had been shot dead in his cell in 1994, along with three unidentified Uighur political prisoners who had tried to protect him (AI 1 Apr 1999).

Amnesty provided few personal details about the executed men, other than that Obulkasim reportedly was born into an educated family in Aksu district in Xinjiang (AI 1 Apr 1999).

The executed prisoners were among a group of Xinjiang men who were arrested in August 1992 in connection with an alleged attempt to establish the Islamic Reformist Party. At least two who were not executed were instead sentenced to prison (AI 1 Apr 1999).

One of the two, a Uighur named Abdul Hemit, was sentenced in 1993 to seven years in jail, according to the Amnesty International report. The other, identified only as Mutalip, was serving a ten-year prison term when the report was released in 1999 (AI 1 Apr 1999).

The August 1992 crackdown followed the November 1990 arrest of another Uighur, Abdukiram Abduveli, who was sentenced in 1993, following a closed trial, to 12 years in jail for his alleged role in setting up the Islamic Reformist Party, according to an October 1999 Amnesty International report (AI 1 Oct 1999). Reviewing the circumstances surrounding Abduveli¿s arrest, charge, and trial, Amnesty International concluded that, ¿the evidence against him appears to have been manipulated in order to ensure his conviction¿ (AI 1 Oct 1999).

Abduveli and four other Uighurs allegedly formed the Islamic Reformist Party in October 1990, and reportedly planned to hold the party¿s first meeting in February 1991. Abduveli also was convicted of ¿carrying out counter-revolutionary propaganda and agitation¿ (AI 1 Oct 1999). The latter charge referred to his alleged advocacy of violence and efforts to spread Islam. The four other alleged organizers were detained in 1992, according to the report (AI 1 Oct 1999).

Taken together, the two Amnesty International reports do not make it clear whether any of the four Uighurs referred to in connection with Abduveli¿s case were among those known to have been executed or jailed (AI 1 Apr 1999; AI 1 Oct 1999).

The Chinese Government has linked the Islamic Reformist Party to terrorism not only in the 1995 public notice, but also in at least two official reports. A January 2002 report cited the ¿Shock Brigade of the Islamic Reformist Party¿ as an example of Uighur ¿terrorist forces¿ that had set up ¿training bases¿ in Xinjiang (BBC 21 Jan 2002). The report accused the group of training more than 60 terrorists at a camp in Basheriq township in Yeching county. ¿Most of the trainees later participated in the major terrorist activities, such as explosions, assassinations and robberies, from 1991 to 1993 in various parts of Xinjiang,¿ the report said (BBC 21 Jan 2002).

Released as the global campaign against pan-Islamic terrorism was intensifying, the report highlighted some of the more than 200 violent incidents in Xinjiang between 1990 and 2001 that Beijing characterizes as terrorism (BBC 21 Jan 2002).

Earlier, an official 1994 report on ¿Pan-Islamism and Pan-Turkism¿ blamed the ¿Islamic Reformist Party of East Turkestan¿ for the 1992 Urumqi bombings. East Turkestan is the name of two short-lived, independent republics set up in 1933 and 1944 in what today is China¿s Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region (AI 1 Apr 1999).

The Islamic Reformist Party is not on the U.S. State Department¿s August 2002 list of ¿Foreign Terrorist Organizations¿ (U.S. DOS 9 Aug 2002).

There were no references to a Xinjiang group called Islamic Isalahatcilar in information currently available to the RIC within time constraints.

This response was prepared after researching publicly accessible information currently available to the RIC within time constraints. This response is not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular claim to refugee status or asylum.

References:

Amnesty International (AI). GROSS VIOLATIONS OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE XINJIANG UIGHUR AUTONOMOUS REGION (1 Apr 1999). http://web.amnesty.org/library/print/ENGASA170181999 [Accessed 9 Oct 2002]

Amnesty International (AI). GROSS VIOLATIONS OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE XINJIANG UIGHUR AUTONOMOUS REGION: PRISONER PROFILES (1 Oct 1999). http://web.amnesty.org/library/print/ENGASA170361999 [Accessed 9 Oct 2002]

British Broadcasting Corporation Monitoring (BBC). Xinhua News Agency. ¿China¿s State Council Issues Article on East Turkestan ¿Terrorist Forces¿¿ (21 Jan 2002) - WESTLAW.

U.S. Department of State (U.S. DOS). ¿Foreign Terrorist Organizations¿ (9 Aug 2002). http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/fs/2002/12389.htm [Accessed 8 Oct 2002]

Last Reviewed/Updated:
08/23/2013
Was this page helpful?
0 / 2000
To protect your privacy, please do not include any personal information in your feedback. Review our Privacy Policy.
Return to top
  • Topics
  • Forms
  • Newsroom
  • Citizenship
  • Green Card
  • Laws
  • Tools
U.S. Department of Homeland Security Seal, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube
Instagram
LinkedIn
Email
Contact USCIS
U.S. Department of Homeland Security Seal
Agency description

USCIS.gov

An official website of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security

Important links
  • About USCIS
  • Accessibility
  • Budget and Performance
  • DHS Components
  • Freedom of Information Act
  • No FEAR Act Data
  • Privacy and Legal Disclaimers
  • Site Map
  • Office of the Inspector General
  • The White House
  • USA.gov
Looking for U.S. government information and services?
Visit USA.gov