Skip to content
November 5, 2025
  • ئۇيغۇرچە
  • 中文
  • Deutsche
  • Türkçe
  • Русский
  • 日本語
  • العربية
  • Français
  • Español
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Writers

Uyghur Times

We Speak the Truth about China and Uyghurs

Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Uyghurland
    • Governance and Control
    • Regions and Cities
    • Economy and Resources
    • Society and Culture
    • State Media & Propaganda Tracker
  • China
    • Chinese Government
    • Rule of law and democracy
    • Chinese Diplomacy
    • Chinese Economy
    • Chinese Society
    • Chinese Media
    • China threat
    • Hong Kong, Taiwan & Tibet
  • Human Rights
    • Uyghur Forced labor & human trafficking
    • Uyghur Prisoners and Victims
    • Facilities & prisons
    • Culture and religion
    • Uyghur Refugees & Transnational repression
    • Uyghur Women and Children
    • The Chinese documents
    • Testimonies
    • Uyghur Genocide
  • Politics
    • International Response
      • Countries
      • International organizations
      • Corporations
      • Muslim World
      • Jews and Christians
      • International figures
    • Uyghur Movement
      • Uyghur Organizations
      • Grassroots Movement
    • Laws and Policies
  • Diaspora
    • Culture ans society
    • Diaspora Life Stories
      • Uyghur Diaspora in Americas
      • Uyghur Diaspora in Central Asia
      • Uyghur Diaspora in Turkiye
      • Uyghur Diaspora in Europe
      • Uyghur Diaspora in Middle East
      • Uyghur Diaspora in Pacific
  • Opinion
    • Editorials
    • Columnists
    • Global Observers
    • Uyghur Perspective
    • Organizational Watch
      • Statements from Uyghur groups
    • Debates
    • Speeches
    • Letters
  • People
    • Artists
    • Politicians & Activists
    • Business Leaders
    • Scholars & Intellectuals
    • Public Figures & Thought Leaders
  • Culture
    • Art
    • Books
    • Dance
    • Photography and Design
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Life Style
    • Movies
    • Music
    • TV
    • Literature
  • Science
    • Climate
    • Education
    • Health
    • Tech
  • Business
    • Economy
    • Industries
    • Markets
      • Real Estate
      • Energy
    • Uyghur Business
  • Uyghur Studies
    • Uyghur Explainer
    • Uyghur History
    • Uyghur Language and Literature
    • Modern Uyghur Issues
    • Art and Aesthetics
    • Uyghur Cuisine
  • Media Monitor
    • Uyghur Disinformation Watch
    • Uyghurs In Chinese Media
    • State Media & Propaganda Tracker
    • Uyghurs In Western Media
    • Uyghurs in Muslim media
    • Uyghurs In Turkic Media
  • World
  • Video
Live
  • Home
  • Human Rights
  • Uyghur Genocide
  • Uyghur Man’s Long Journey to Freedom May End With Return to China
  • Uyghur Genocide

Uyghur Man’s Long Journey to Freedom May End With Return to China

An ethnic Uyghur who escaped to Morocco is facing the possibility of being sent back to China while his wife fights for his freedom.
Anne Kader January 19, 2022

Idris Hasan is pictured with his children before he left for Morocco in 2020 from Turkey. (Courtesy – Zeynure Obul)

 

By Asim Kashgarian (Voice of America, VOA)

 

An ethnic Uyghur who escaped to Morocco is facing the possibility of being sent back to China while his wife fights for his freedom. 

 

The story of Idris Hasan, whose Chinese name is Yidiresi Aishan, started 14 years ago. In 2008, when he was a 20-year-old student at the China University of Petroleum in eastern China, he and four of his fellow Uyghur classmates were beaten and arrested by local police.

 

His wife, Zeynure Obul, said the reason given by the police was that he and his Uyghur classmates were from Xinjiang and appeared suspicious in an ethnic Han majority Chinese city. 

 

A Radio Free Asia reporter reached out to Hasan for an interview after he wrote online about the “unjust” incident.

 

“My husband spoke to RFA about what happened in a phone interview and his life changed since then,” Obul told VOA from Istanbul.

 

Police target

 

She said he became a regular target of police interrogations since that media interview.

 

“They scolded him for receiving an interview from a U.S. media, and when he graduated, he decided to leave the country in 2012, right after our marriage,” Obul said, adding that she joined her husband in Turkey in 2013.

 

While in Turkey, Hasan helped Uyghur rights groups using his graphic design skills. After living in Istanbul for more than a year, the couple applied for a Turkish permit to continue to stay in Istanbul on humanitarian grounds.

 

“I got quickly approved for the humanitarian residence, but the Turkish police took my husband to an extradition center and kept him there in a cell,” Obul said.

 

Zeynure Obul with three children protests in front of the Moroccan Embassy in Istanbul. (Zeynure Obul)

 

Obul said Turkish authorities told her Hasan’s passport was on a wanted list provided by China. 

 

“From 2014 until last year, my husband was arrested arbitrarily four times by Turkish authorities,” Obul said. “The longest time he stayed in detention in Turkey was more than a year.” 

 

In 2021, after seeing his name on a publicly disclosed Turkish government document about China’s wanted Uyghurs in Turkey, Hasan decided to leave the country.

 

“His two previous attempts at the Istanbul airport to leave Turkey were unsuccessful,” Obul said, adding that the border police interrogated him and did not let him leave.

 

In July, he finally succeeded and flew to Casablanca, Morocco. 

 

“My husband told me on the phone that the border police were on the phone with their boss for a long time before they released him to fly to Casablanca,” Obul said.

 

When Hasan got there, he sent his wife a message telling her he had arrived. Four days later she received a call from him from a Casablanca detention centre saying he had been arrested at the airport and taken to a prison near the town of Tiflet. 

 

He was then detained for months because of delays in his court hearing.

 

Request to Interpol

 

Obul corresponded with Interpol and learned her husband’s arrest in Morocco was due to China’s Red Notice to Interpol, which is a request to law enforcement worldwide for a fugitive. “After organizations like Amnesty International spoke of my husband, Interpol finally canceled my husband’s name from its list, saying it informed all 194 member countries about this change,” Obul said.

 

Interpol confirmed cancelling the red notice for Hasan which was under his Chinese name, Yidiresi Aishan. In an email to VOA Interpol said the notice was issued according to the information available when the request was made, but Interpol will not comment on the reasons why the red notice was canceled.

 

“We cannot communicate any specific information about the information examined in our review process or any exchanges that could have taken place between the General Secretariat and a specific member country,” Interpol stated in the email.

 

Last month, however, during the sixth trial by a Moroccan court, it was decided that Hasan would be extradited to China.

 

VOA sent multiple inquiries to the Chinese Embassy in Washington asking about the nature of Hasan’s crime but has not received a response. The Moroccan Embassy in Washington also did not respond to VOA’s multiple requests for an interview about whether Hasan would be deported.

 

“After waiting for my husband’s freedom for months, the Moroccan authorities have made a decision that presents a grave threat to the life and safety of my husband and father of my three children,” Obul said.

Carolyn Nash, Amnesty International USA’s Asia advocacy director, described Hasan’s case as “a grave reminder of the extraordinary efforts of the Chinese authorities to extend the government’s repressive power” outside its borders — to intimidate diaspora communities and chill critical speech.

 

 

“Moroccan Prime Minister Aziz Akhannouch must stop the extradition of Idris Hasan immediately,” Nash told VOA. “If they [Morocco authorities] fail in this obligation, it could have horrifying implications for the safety of Uyghur diaspora communities across other regions of the world.”

 

Accusations of mistreatment

 

The United States is among the countries and international rights organizations that accuse China of genocide and crimes against humanity toward Uyghurs and other Turkic ethnic groups in Xinjiang. They say more than 1 million Uyghurs are being detained in internment camps while facing torture and other mistreatment by Chinese authorities.

 

Beijing denies the accusations and has said that the complexes are “vocational training centers” built to counter extremism and terrorism in Xinjiang and improve the lives of Uyghurs. 

 

U.N. human rights experts have called on Morocco to halt Hasan’s extradition to China, stating that Morocco’s decision “violates principles of non-refoulment,” which is the practice of not sending asylum-seekers back to a place where they will be persecuted.

 

According to Mary Lawlor, the U.N. special rapporteur on human rights defenders, it’s encouraging that Hasan has not been deported yet.

 

“While he remains in Morocco there is still hope for him, and for a positive outcome. The case isn’t complicated — he shouldn’t be put in danger by being extradited to China,” Lawlor told VOA.

 

 

Editor’s note: This story has been updated with new information from Interpol.

 

 

 

Originally published in VOA News (Voice of America) on January 14, 2022. Re-published with permission from VOA. 

 

 

 

 

About the Author

Anne Kader

Author

View All Posts

Post navigation

Previous: Write for Uyghur Times to shape the narrative and inspire change
Next: Conversation on Uyghur Genocide With Tahir Imin

Related Stories

uyghur genocide
  • International Response
  • Uyghur Genocide

U.S. Lawmakers Introduce Landmark Uyghur Genocide Accountability Act

Uyghur Times Staff August 4, 2025
Princeton University Press Director Accused of Campaigning to Whitewash Uyghur Genocide
  • Uyghur Genocide

Princeton University Press Director Accused of Campaigning to Whitewash Uyghur Genocide

Uyghur Times Staff June 29, 2025
uyghur genocide
  • Uyghur Explainer
  • Uyghur Genocide
  • Uyghur Perspective

10 Truths the World Must Face About China’s Uyghur Genocide

tipilmas June 3, 2025

Uyghur Homeland

  • Chinese Government Issues White Paper to Celebrate 70 Years of Uyghur Occupation and Genocide
    by Uyghur Times Staff
    September 23, 2025
  • Xi to Lead Ceremony on 70 Years of Uyghur Subjugation: Timeline of Major Visits & Meetings on Uyghur Issues
    by Uyghur Times Staff
    September 23, 2025
  • China Appoints United Front Operative Chen Xiaojiang as Communist Party Chief of Uyghur Region
    by Uyghur Times Staff
    July 1, 2025
  • China Appoints Kashgar University President as Director of “Xinjiang” Education Department
    by Uyghur Times Staff
    April 6, 2025
  • China Starts Using AI for Uyghur and Kazakh Film Translations
    by admin
    January 25, 2025

Uyghur Studies

  • 10 Truths the World Must Face About China’s Uyghur Genocide
    by tipilmas
    June 3, 2025
  • George Washington University Offers Online Chaghatay Course for Summer 2025
    by Uyghur Times Staff
    May 1, 2025
  • China’s First Xinjiang Tomb Museum Attempts to Rewrite Uyghur History
    by tipilmas
    July 19, 2024
  • Ugur by Aziza:  A fusion of Uyghur culinary traditions with a touch of Saudi Arabia
    by Uyghur Times
    January 6, 2024
  • What is Uyghur forced labor ?
    by Uyghur Times
    December 26, 2023

World

  • EU Leaders Commit to Decrease Dependency on China
  • Statement against the Chinese government’s false propaganda regarding the UIGHUR Act passed by the U.S. House
  • Urgent: Save Abulikemu YUSUFU, a Uighur man facing deportation from Doha International Airport to China
  • Uighur people thank the 22 countries who stood up for Uighurs
  • International protests in solidarity with Uighurs on July 21st, 2019

You may have missed

Uyghur Woman Says Her Mother Was Deported by Germany to China, Faces Possible Persecution
  • Uyghur Refugees & Transnational repression

Uyghur Woman Says Her Mother Was Deported by Germany

Uyghur Times Staff November 4, 2025
Japan’s Prime Minister Raises “Serious Concerns” with Xi over Uyghurs
  • International Response

Japan’s Prime Minister Raises “Serious Concerns” with Xi over Uyghur and maritime Issues

Uyghur Times Staff October 31, 2025
Trump Ignores Uyghur Genocide in Meeting with Xi Jinping
  • International Response

Trump Ignores Uyghur Genocide in Meeting with Xi Jinping

Uyghur Times Staff October 30, 2025
Uyghur Camp Survivor’s Nephew Arrested in Urumqi
  • Uncategorized

Uyghur Camp Survivor’s Nephew Arrested in Urumqi for Liking Her Post on Chinese TikTok

Uyghur Times Staff October 30, 2025

About Uyghur Times

Uyghur Times, a Washington, DC-based media organization, is dedicated to telling the truth about China and its policies toward the Uyghur people.  Our comprehensive coverage extends to politics in the People’s Republic of China and Central Asia, delivered in multiple languages including Uyghur, Mandarin Chinese, English, Turkish, Arabic, German, Japanese, French, and Russian. 

Support Us

  • Write for Uyghur Times
  • Work with Uyghur Times
  • Support Uyghur Times
  • Contact Uyghur Times

Uyghur Times Projects

  • Uyghur Radio
  • Uyghur Times Video
  • TV Uyghur
  • Uyghur Album
  • About Uyghur Times
  • ئۇيغۇرچە
  • 中文
  • Deutsche
  • Türkçe
  • Русский
  • 日本語
  • العربية
  • Français
  • Español
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Writers
Copyright © All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.