On July 5, 2009
ethnic rioting took place between Uyghurs and Han in
Ürümqi, the capital of Xinjiang. The government reported that more than 150 people, mostly Han Chinese, were killed during the clashes. On July 8, 2009, Radio Free Asia reported that Ilham's whereabouts were unknown after he had been summoned from his home in Beijing. which was signed by other dissidents including
Ran Yunfei.
Amnesty International, and
Reporters Without Borders also issued appeals or statements of concern. Ilham was released from detention on August 23, along with two other Chinese dissidents,
Xu Zhiyong and Zhuang Lu, after pressure on Beijing from the administration of American President
Barack Obama. Ilham said that during his detention, he was confined to his home and a hotel with several police officers who did not treat him inhumanely. He stated that after his release, they warned him against criticism of the government's handling of riots, Chinese authorities arrested and detained Ilham again in January 2014 while boarding a flight from
Beijing to
United States with his daughter and Uyghur activist
Jewher Ilham. after Ilham's criticism of Beijing's response to a suicide bombing near Tianamen Square, carried out by Uyghurs. After a two day trial, The Urumqi People's Intermediate Court found Ilham guilty and and the Chinese government removed computers from his home. As well seizing all his money and property. on charges of separatism and held at a detention center in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. Prosecutors alleged that he had promoted independence for Xinjiang through his website,
Uyghur Online, which he had established to foster dialogue and understanding between Uyghurs and Han Chinese. His imprisonment is criticized by a number of human rights organizations around the globe; such as
Electronic Frontier Foundation. Following the sentencing, his family focused on raising support for his wife and children rather than campaigning publicly for his release. == International support ==