The United States has called for the release of a Uighur Muslim medical doctor whose relatives say she was sentenced to 20 years in jail in China because of family members' human rights activism in the US.
The daughter of Gulshan Abbas told a briefing organised with the bipartisan US Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC) that the family had recently learned her mother received the sentence in March last year on terrorism-related charges, after disappearing in September 2018.
In Beijing on Thursday, a foreign ministry spokesman said Dr Abbas was sentenced for the crimes of joining a terrorist organisation, helping terrorist activities and "assembling a crowd to disrupt social order".
"We urge certain politicians in the United States to respect facts and stop fabricating lies and smearing China," the spokesman, Wang Wenbin, told a news conference.
The daughter, Ziba Murat, called the charges "preposterous".
Dr Abbas' sister, Rushan Abbas, said they stemmed from activism by her and her brother Rishat Abbas, both of whom are based in the US.
"We have committed to working to defend our people's rights and advocate for justice, and now our sister is denied justice as a punishment," Rushan Abbas said.
In a tweet, the US assistant secretary of state for democracy, human rights and labour, Robert Destro, said Gulshan Abbas must be released.
"Her forcible disappearance, detainment and harsh sentencing by the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) is evidence of a family suffering the consequences of speaking out against a government that has no respect for human rights," he said.
Ziba Murat said she could not reveal the source of the information on the sentencing to protect their identity.
"We only learned that she is sentenced to 20 years, and we're trying to get more information," she said.
"My mum is a medical professional, non-political, kind person who has spent her life helping people," she said, adding that her mother was in fragile health and suffered from multiple conditions, including high blood pressure.
The CECC chairman, Democratic Representative James McGovern, called the punishment of an innocent family member in what he said was an attempt to silence free expression "morally reprehensible."
He said it was just part of a "mass persecution" of Uighurs in China that has involved detention of as many as 1.8 million in internment camps, forced labour and other abuses.
China calls the heavily guarded centres educational and vocational institutes, and says all those who attended have "graduated" and gone home.