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China-Japan-Koreas
Another minority faces China's heavy hand
2008-04-15
Almost unnoticed amid the wide-scale protests by Tibetans over the past month is the social unrest among the roughly 8 million Muslim Uighurs in China's resource-rich far western territory.

Recently, hundreds of Muslim women in black veils gathered outside the market in this oasis city in an impromptu protest. Some carried signs demanding an independent state in the region, which is rich in oil, coal and minerals. "I saw the demonstration myself. There were 500 to 700 women in black, waving placards for East Turkestan," said Wu Jiangliang, a hydroelectric company employee. Police moved quickly to quell the March 23 protest, arresting numerous women and shooing others away. It drew only minor notice.

China also has broken up what it said were two terrorist rings that intended to disrupt the Beijing Olympics and thwarted what it said was a terrorist attempt last month on a commercial airliner.

As the state employed a firm hand against restive Uighurs, pronounced WEE-gers, they also publicly demonized those behind the unrest. Critics say that while the state has stabilized ethnic areas, the harsh language may exacerbate tensions. "The problem is that China's policies are alienating," said Nicholas Bequelin, a Hong Kong-based researcher for Human Rights Watch, an advocacy group. "They are efficient in that political repression works. But they increase ethnic tensions."

Conversations in the marketplaces and along the sandy streets of this city reveal that Han Chinese and Uighurs live side by side but share little except mistrust and fear. "I don't have Chinese friends," said a Uighur shopkeeper who identified herself only as Ayguzal. "Chinese people never come in here."

Since 2006, controls have stiffened. Muslim shopkeepers aren't allowed to pray in their stores, and state employees are discouraged from practicing any religion.

Tensions in Khotan rose early this year when state security arrested a prominent Uighur jade merchant, Mutallip Hajim, who was known to help young Muslim students. On March 3, police gave Hajim's body to his family, saying he had died of a heart attack. He was 38.
Posted by:ryuge

#8  Yeah, they probably aren't worth feeling too sorry for. If we bent over in front of them they'd be happy to stick it in and break it off in us.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2008-04-15 18:57  

#7  The Uighurs militants are tight with Osama...
Just saying...
Posted by: 3dc   2008-04-15 17:38  

#6  Well, now we know...political repression works. Works for me, not for thee.
Posted by: wxjames   2008-04-15 11:44  

#5  Sad to say it but the Chinese plan of ethnic cleansing by getting Han into Tibet and East Turkestan is a good one, if the Chinese government lasts long enough to see it through.

If the ChiCom government falls we'll get Yugoslavia like ethnic cleansing in both areas.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2008-04-15 11:14  

#4  A friend of mine went to this area several years back, and it resembles nothing like what we think of as China. The people do resemble the citizens of the "istans" a LOT more than Chinese. And, even though it's majority Muslim, he was more scared of the Chinese *police* than the locals.
Posted by: BA   2008-04-15 09:30  

#3  Goverment importation of ethnic Han into the area to increase both presence and rational for whatever "protecting" needs to be done.
Posted by: steven   2008-04-15 09:25  

#2  "the region, which is rich in oil, coal and minerals"

Uh huh, you betcha. The Chicoms will just pack up and leave it all to ya.
Posted by: Woozle Elmeter 2700   2008-04-15 09:01  

#1  An unusually reasonable piece of reporting.
Posted by: Menhadden Snogum6713   2008-04-15 07:45  

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