Tashpolat Tiyip

Tashpolat Tiyip (Uighur: تاشپولات تېيىپ, romanized: Tashpolat Téyip; Chinese: 塔西甫拉提・特依拜; pinyin: tǎxīfǔlātí tèyībài; born December 1958) is a Chinese geographer of Uyghur ethnicity who was president of Xinjiang University from 2010 to 2017.[1] He was sentenced to death in a secret trial.[2]

Biography

Tiyip enrolled at Xinjiang University in 1978 to study geography and graduated in 1983. In 1988, he went to Japan to study for a master's degree and PhD at Tokyo University of Science, where he received a Doctorate of Engineering in Applied Geography in March 1992.[3] In 1993, he was appointed as professor in the Department of Geography at Xinjiang University. In 1996, Tiyip was appointed Vice President of Xinjiang University and in 2010 he was promoted to President of Xinjiang University and Vice Secretary of the Communist Party at the university.[2]

In November 2008, Tiyip received an honorary doctorate from École pratique des hautes études.[4]

Arrest and trial

In March 2017, when Tiyip was on the way to a conference in Germany, he was detained at Beijing airport, accused of being a "two-faced" person.[2] After Tiyip's arrest he was held incommunicado and he was eventually put on trial in secret on the charge of separatism. Tiyip was found guilty and sentenced to death, suspended for two years.[2] On 27 December 2019, the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Tiyip was under investigation for suspected corruption and denied he was either tried or sentenced.[5]

References

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