Home
/
Isiam
/
Muslim Minorities
/
Uyghur woman faces forced abortion ordered by China
Uyghur woman faces forced abortion ordered by China
Nov 13, 2024 11:31 PM

  An ethnic Uyghur woman faces an imminent abortion of her third child, Radio Free Asia reported.

  The report said "Arzigul Tursun, six months pregnant with her third child, is under guard in a hospital in East Turkistan region, scheduled to undergo an abortion against her will because authorities say she is entitled to only two children."

  "Arzigul is being kept in bed number three," a nurse in the women's section at Gulja's Water Gate Hospital told Radio Free Asia in a telephone interview.

  "We will give an injection first. Then she will experience abdominal pain, and the baby will come out by itself. But we haven't given her any injection yet—we are waiting for instructions from the doctors."

  China's one-child-per-family policy applies mainly to majority Han Chinese but allows ethnic minorities, including Uyghurs, to have additional children, with peasants permitted to have three children and city-dwellers two.

  But while Tursun is a peasant, her husband, Nurmemet Tohtasin, is from the city of Gulja [in Chinese, Yining] so their status is unclear. The couple live with their two children in Bulaq village, Dadamtu township, in Gulja.

  Their experience sheds rare light on how China's one-child policy is enforced in remote parts of the country.

  "My wife is being kept in the hospital—village officials are guarding her," Tohtisin said before authorities directed him late Thursday to switch off his mobile phone.

  "When she fled the village to avoid abortion, police and Party officials, and the family planning committee officials, all came and interrogated us," he said. "The deputy chief of the village, a Chinese woman named Wei Yenhua, threatened that if we didn't find Arzigul and bring her to the village, she would confiscate our land and all our property."

  Steep fines

  On Nov. 11, Tohtisin said, an official named Rashide from the village family planning committee came to their home and escorted the couple, along with Arzigul's father, to the Gulja's municipal Water Gate Hospital.

  There, Tohtisin said, he was pressured into signing forms authorizing an abortion.

  "The abortion should be carried out because according to the family planning policy of China, you're not allowed to have more children than the government has regulated. Therefore she should undergo an abortion. This is their third child. She is 6-1/2 months pregnant now," Rashide said.

  "If her health is normal, then the abortion will definitely take place. Otherwise they have to pay a fine in the amount of 45,000 yuan (U.S. $ 6,590)—that's a lot of money, and they won't have it," she added.

  Arzigul Tursun's abortion was originally scheduled for Thursday, but hospital authorities said they had postponed it until Monday after numerous calls from local and exiled Uyghurs.

  Officials then told her husband to switch off his mobile phone and stop making calls.

  According to the official news agency, Xinhua, Uyghurs in the countryside are permitted three children while city-dwellers may have two.

  Under "special circumstances," rural families are permitted one more child, although what constitutes special circumstances was unclear.

  The government also uses financial incentives and disincentives to keep the birthrate low.

  Couples can also pay steep fines to have more children, although the fines are well beyond most people's means.

  US Congressional appeal

  Rep. Chris Smith, a Republican from New Jersey in the U.S. House of Representatives, appealed on Thursday to Chinese Ambassador Zhou Wenzhong to intervene.

  "Human rights groups and the U.S. government will be watching very carefully to see what happens to Arzigul and her family," Smith, senior member of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, said in a statement.

  "I appeal to the Chinese government not to forcibly abort Arzigul."

  PHOTO CAPTION

  China flag

  Source: wordbulletin.net

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Muslim Minorities
Monsoons threaten thousands of Rohingya refugees
  The Rohingya people have still been fleeing to Bangladesh from restive Rakhine state of Myanmar and they reside in the areas that are at high risk of landslides and flooding, the UN refugee agency said on Friday.   About 8,000 Rohingya refugees have fled to Bangladesh so far this year, UNHCR...
Why do Muslims oppose citizenship engineering in India?
  by Mohammad Pervez Bilgrami   India’s Hindu nationalist government recently passed the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) to amend the Citizenship Act of 1955, paving the way for granting Indian citizenship to religious minorities from Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Bangladesh. Those listed as eligible to become Indians in the new law are Hindus,...
France’s desperate endeavors to design a ‘French Islam’
  In Sept. 2018, “Institut Montaigne”, a French think tank close to French President Emmanuel Macron’s government, published a report that calls for a stronger regulation of Muslim religious practices by the state in order to better counter “Islamism”.   Entitled “Islamism Factory”, the report triggered a turmoil among French Muslim communities...
Frustrated Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh desperate to move to 3rd countries
  Amid stalled efforts to repatriate Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh to Myanmar, many people from the persecuted ethnic minority are seeking a way out and playing into the hands of human smugglers.   Hundreds of Rohingya refugees take perilous journeys on boats through the Bay of Bengal to reach Malaysia, Thailand and...
Rohingya: 'Better to kill us in India than deport us to Myanmar'
  Jafar Alam sits by a small grocery shop in the Rohingya refugee camp in New Delhi's Kalindi Kunj area.   A police officer who visited the camp had asked Alam to fill a six-page "personal data" form. Alam refused.   "Today, if you will not cooperate with us, we will not cooperate...
Muslims in Chile
  By: Ahmad Mahmood As-Sayyid   Chile is situated along the western seaboard of South America, bordering the South Pacific Ocean. It shares borders with Peru to the north, Bolivia to the northeast, and Argentina to the east. The total population of Chile is 16 million. Catholics make up 80.7% of the...
UN: Potential ‘crimes against humanity’ in China’s Xinjiang
  Long-delayed report from UN human rights office says abuses against mostly Muslim Uighurs stem from ‘anti-terrorism law systems’.   China’s detention of Uighurs and other mostly Muslim ethnic minorities in the northwestern region of Xinjiang may amount to “crimes against humanity”, the United Nations human rights office said in a long-delayed...
Buddhists 'lured' to settle on Rohingya land
  Myanmar authorities have lured dozens of mainly Buddhist but with some Christians, Bangladeshi tribal families to cross the border and resettle on land abandoned by fleeing Muslim-majority Rohingya, officials said Monday.   About 50 families from remote hill and forest areas on the Bangladesh side, attracted by offers of free land...
US hits China over reports of Uighur 'family planning'
  US State Secretary Mike Pompeo denounced China Monday following the reports that Beijing forces birth control on Uighurs to suppress their population.   "The world received disturbing reports today that the Chinese Communist Party [CCP] is using forced sterilization, forced abortion, and coercive family planning against Uyghurs and other minorities in...
Rohingya stranded at sea, Bangladesh says not its responsibility
  by Faisal Mahmud   Rights groups urge Dhaka to allow some 500 Rohingya stuck in the Bay of Bengal to come ashore.   The Bangladesh government has refused to allow some 500 Rohingya refugees stranded on board two fishing trawlers in the Bay of Bengal to come ashore, drawing criticism from rights...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved