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China protests over Uighur tour | |
(about 6 hours later) | |
China has complained to Australia about the forthcoming visit of exiled Uighur leader Rebiya Kadeer, officials say. | |
Mrs Kadeer is to attend a film festival in Melbourne next week, and will give a televised speech. | |
Meanwhile, China summoned Japan's ambassador in Beijing to protest about Mrs Kadeer's visit to Tokyo, where she has met members of the governing party. | |
China accuses the World Uighur Congress leader of inciting ethnic violence this month that left nearly 200 people dead. | |
Mrs Kadeer, 62, who lives in exile in the US, denies the allegation. | |
An Australian official said China had made repeated representations about Mrs Kadeer's visit, and that it had been discussed in both Canberra and Beijing. | |
Website hacked | |
In Australia, Mrs Kadeer is to attend the Melbourne International Film Festival, which is screening a documentary about her life, 10 Conditions of Love, on 8 August. | |
The festival's director, Richard Moore, says a Chinese official had urged him to withdraw the film. | |
And he told ABC radio that someone had hacked in to the festival's website. | |
"This little Chinese flag sort of popped up and went ding-da-ding-ding-ding and there was a message on it that said basically they objected to the presence of this film. | |
"They were a concerned Chinese citizen and Rebiya Kadeer was a terrorist." | |
Mrs Kadeer's supporters greeted her on her arrival in Japan on Tuesday | |
On Wednesday, the Chinese foreign ministry said it had summoned Tokyo's ambassador to demand that the Japanese government "take effective action to stop her anti-China, splittist activities in Japan", Reuters news agency reports. | |
Earlier in the day, Mrs Kadeer had met members of Japan's governing Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) at the party's headquarters. | |
She told the Kyodo news agency: "I received the impression that they will not accept China's continued oppression of the Uighurs." | |
At a news conference, she said that "nearly 10,000 people" disappeared in one night in the city of Urumqi, the capital of the Xinjiang region. | |
"If they are dead, where are their bodies? If they are detained, where are they?" | |
'Terrible conditions' | |
She was alluding to violence which broke out in Urumqi on 5 July, between the Uighurs and the Han Chinese. The clashes continued for several days. | |
Other sources put the number of those detained in Urumqi at 1,400. | |
Japan says it does not expect Mrs Kadeer's visit to affect its relations with China. | |
A spokesman said she was invited by civil society organisations rather than the government. | |
Mrs Kadeer says she came to Japan to tell people about what she described as the terrible conditions being endured by the Uighur minority in north-west China. | |
Many Uighurs there resent the influx of Han Chinese immigrants. They feel economic growth has bypassed them and complain of discrimination and diminished opportunities. |