A nine-year-old Muslim Uyghur girl living in Turkey has called for help from the international community to be reunited with five family members detained in Thailand for more than a year after illegally entering the country while escaping persecution in northwestern China’s Xinjiang region.
Rahlia—who escaped from a Thai immigration detention center in September along with her then-pregnant mother and three of her siblings—said she had not spoken with her father, two other siblings, uncle or cousin for eight months, and asked for assistance in bringing them to Turkey.
“We traveled from [Xinjiang’s] Kashgar (in Chinese, Kashi) city to Cambodia, Cambodia to Vietnam, Vietnam to Thailand, Thailand to Malaysia and Malaysia to Turkey—using back roads the entire way,” she told RFA’s Uyghur Service over the weekend.
“But my father, my uncle, my cousin and some of my siblings are still in Thailand,” she said.
Rahlia said that she had been happy in the eight months since resettling in Turkey’s Kayseri province, where she was attending school, but missed her family members dearly and had recently written a letter to her father at the Thai refugee detention center.
“I wrote a letter to my father because I miss him and my brothers so much,” she said.
“I wish we could be reunited—even spending one day together with them would be sufficient for me. Please bring my relatives to me. That is all I hope for and that is what I will pray for.”
In her letter, a copy of which was provided to RFA, Rahlia asks her father to endure while they wait to see one another again.
“Since we separated, I am left with a saddened heart. But father, be patient and I will be patient and, if Allah wills it, we will unite again for sure,” the letter reads.
“Father, if we cannot reunite in this life, we may join one another in heaven … Being patient is very important in this journey, but I miss you so much.”
Rahlia’s family members are among about 70 Turkic-speaking, Muslim Uyghurs held in a government-run refugee detention center in Padang Besar in Songkhla province’s Sadao district, southern Thailand, since March 2014 in what visitors have described as cramped and unhygienic conditions.
Many have complained of worsening conditions and poor food quality, and detainees held a hunger strike in January to demand authorities improve the situation at the facility. One ethnic Uyghur boy detained there died last December after contracting tuberculosis.
The 70 detainees—and some 300 others being held at centers in the Thai cities of Bangkok, Rayong and Trat—have remained in limbo more than a year into their detention, with Beijing demanding they be repatriated to China.
Brazen escape