We Uyghurs Have No Say: An Imprisoned Writer Speaks

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In Xinjiang, the large northwest region of China, the government has imprisoned more than a million Uyghurs in reeducation camps. One of the incarcerated—whose sentence, unlike most others, has no end date—is Ilham Tohti, an intellectual and economist, a prolific writer, and formerly the host of a website, Uyghur Online. In 2014, Tohti was arrested; accused of advocating separatism, violence, and the overthrow of the Chinese government; subjected to a two-day trial; and sentenced to life. Nothing has been heard from him since. Here are Tohti’s own words, a collection of his plain-spoken calls for justice, scholarly explanations of the history of Xinjiang, and poignant personal reflections. While his courage and outspokenness about the plight of China’s Muslim minorities is extraordinary, these essays sound a measured insistence on peace and just treatment for the Uyghurs. Winner of the PEN/Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award and the Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought while imprisoned, this book is the only way to hear from a man who has been called “a Uyghur Mandela.”

Author(s): Ilham Tohti (ئىلھام توختى, 伊力哈木·土赫提); Yaxue Cao; Cindy Carter; Matthew Robertson; Rian Thum
Edition: 1
Publisher: Verso Books
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 192
City: London / New York

Preface: Ilham Tohti and the Uyghurs, by Rian Thum, University of Manchester

Articles
The Source of Xinjiang Ethnic Tensions as I See Them (2005)
The Need to Mount Long-Term Resistance to Totalitarianism and Ethnonationalist Chauvinism (2006)
Isn’t It Time to Rethink China’s Ethnic Policies? (2009)
My Ideals and the Career Path I Have Chosen (2011)
“The Wounds of the Uyghur People Have Not Healed” (2013)

Essay
Present-Day Ethnic Problems in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region: Overview and Recommendations (2013)

Statements
“I Don’t Have Too Many Good Days Ahead of Me” (2013)
“My Outcries Are for My People and, Even More, for the Future of China” (2014)

Interviews
The Watchman of the Uyghur People (2008)
We Uyghurs Have No Say (2012)
Why the Uyghurs Feel Defeated (2013)
“The Uyghurs Are Living in Fear” (2013)