China: We won't torture returnees
Reacting to a U.S. court order to transfer Uighur Muslims to the United States, China said it respects the rule of law and forbids torture.
By Associated Press
BEIJING -- China on Thursday rejected concerns that it would torture Chinese Muslims held by the U.S. military at Guantánamo Bay if they are returned to China, saying they will be dealt with lawfully.
China has called on the United States to repatriate 17 Chinese Muslim detainees who were to have been released this week, saying they are terrorists and should be brought to justice, Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang told a news conference.
''Some people may worry whether these people could be tortured in China. I believe this is biased. China is a country under the rule of law and forbids torture by any Chinese authorities, be they judiciary or public security,'' Qin said.
The Bush administration is trying to find a country to accept the group and has said the detainees might be tortured if they are repatriated to China.
The men have been held at the U.S. Navy base in southeast Cuba since 2002.
On Wednesday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit said it would postpone release of the detainees for at least another week due to objections by the Bush administration.
The move came a day after U.S. District Judge Ricardo M. Urbina ordered the government to bring the detainees to Washington by Friday, saying they have been cleared of wrongdoing.
''We have raised our position to the U.S. and we hope they will take this position seriously and repatriate these 17 people to China shortly,'' Qin said.
The detainees, captured in Pakistan and Afghanistan in 2001, are Uighurs from Xinjiang -- an isolated region that borders Afghanistan, Pakistan and six Central Asian nations -- who say they are oppressed by the Chinese government.
Qin said the men are members of the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, which China says is an Islamic terrorist group that seeks to split the western region of Xinjiang from China. China has blamed sporadic violence and attacks in the region on the group. The U.S. listed it as a terrorist organization in 2002.
The Uighur detainees have become a diplomatic and legal headache for the United States, which no longer wants to hold them but does not know where to send them. Many countries fear diplomatic repercussions from China if they receive them.
Albania accepted five Uighur detainees in 2006 but has since balked at taking others. One of the five men subsequently settled in Sweden.
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