UPDATE - Thai trial of Uighur for Bangkok bombing postponed

UPDATE - Thai trial of Uighur for Bangkok bombing postponed

Lawyers for Adem Karadag and Yusuf Mieraili requested that opening postponed until Sept. 15 so translator can be found

UPDATES THROUGHOUT

By CS Thana

BANGKOK (AA) - Judges at Bangkok's military court have postponed the trial of two Uighur men on charges of involvement in last year's Bangkok bombing in order to track down a Turkic language speaker to translate for the duo.

On Tuesday, lawyers for Adem Karadag and Yusuf Mieraili -- who have denied the charges -- requested that the court delay the opening of the trial until Sept. 15 so they could find someone who speaks Uighur.

"We have petitioned the judge to formally request assistance from the World Uyghur Congress [WUC]," lawyer Choochart Khanphai told Anadolu Agency on Tuesday, after the opening day of the trial.

According to its website, the WUC's focus is to promote the right of the Uighur people to use peaceful, nonviolent, and democratic means to determine the political future of East Turkestan.

Many refer to China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region -- home to many ethnic minority groups, including Turkic Uighur people -- as East Turkestan.

The search for a translator is understood to have began in early June, when the men's original translator, Uzbek man Sirojiddin Bakhodirov, was arrested by Thai police.

After arrest, Bakhodirov claimed he was being framed for helping the alleged bombers.

Uzbek and Uighur are dialects of the Turkic language family spoken by Turkic peoples from Southeast Europe and the Mediterranean to Siberia and Western China.

Judges also refused a request Tuesday from the defendants asking them to be moved from the special military prison where they are currently being held.

The court ruled that because the trial was a special case and "related to national security", they would continue to be housed away from others and remain in military custody.

Karadag and Mieraili have been charged with the Aug. 17 bombing at a Hindu shrine in downtown Bangkok, which left 20 people dead and 125 others injured.

The two men last appeared at a Thai military court May 17, shackled, barefoot, and distraught.

Both Karadag and Mieraili have refused to provide their addresses in Xinjiang out of “fear of reprisal" from China's government, who the Muslim minority group accuses of curtailing their cultural and religious rights.




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