China jails 19 in Xinjiang for security crimes: Uighur groupChina sentenced 19 people in restive Xinjiang to jail terms of three years to life for state security crimes, some in connection with deadly ethnic unrest in July, a US-based activist group said. The Uyghur American Association The Uyghur American Association (UAA) is a Washington-based advocacy organization. It was established in 1998 by a group of Uyghur scholars to raise the public awareness of the Uyghur people in East Turkistan and the other parts of the world. , in a statement emailed to AFP (1) (AppleTalk Filing Protocol) The file sharing protocol used in an AppleTalk network. In order for non-Apple networks to access data in an AppleShare server, their protocols must translate into the AFP language. See file sharing protocol. late Thursday, condemned the convictions of the men in the region's Yili prefecture, urging skepticism about the charges "in the absence of an open... trial". According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. a report on the official China News Service on October 23, the defendants -- whose names indicated they were from the mainly Muslim Uighur minority -- were charged with "harming state security". The ringleader ring·lead·er n. A person who leads others, especially in illicit or informal activities. ringleader Noun a person who leads others in illegal or mischievous actions Noun 1. of the group was sentenced to life in prison for activities that included setting up a group that incited people to disobey dis·o·bey v. dis·o·beyed, dis·o·bey·ing, dis·o·beys v.intr. To refuse or fail to follow an order or rule. v.tr. To refuse or fail to obey (an order or rule). government rule and advocating "holy war", the news report said. He had also planned to organise an "illegal protest" in Yining city after hearing of the July 5 ethnic unrest in Urumqi that left nearly 200 people dead, but abandoned his plans due to heavy security, according to the report. The other 18 men were sentenced to between three to 15 years in jail for various "separatist" crimes and intentional injury, some linked to the Urumqi violence. "It remains a distinct possibility that these men were prosecuted and convicted based on attending peaceful religious meetings and planning to engage in peaceful protest activities," said exiled Uighur leader Rebiya Kadeer Rebiya Kadeer (Uyghur: رابىيه قادى, Rabiye Qadir; Simplified Chinese: 热比娅·卡德尔 . An official at the Yili prefecture branch of the Xinjiang higher people's court The People's Court my refer to:
Two weeks ago, 21 defendants in the regional capital Urumqi were tried over the July 5 unrest. Twelve were given the death penalty. Those sentences were upheld on Friday. China's roughly eight million Turkic-speaking Uighurs have long complained of religious, political and cultural oppression by Chinese authorities, and tensions have simmered in Xinjiang for years. China says it faces a serious terrorist threat from Muslim separatists in Xinjiang but rights groups have accused Beijing of exaggerating the threat in order to justify very tight controls in the region.
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