In China's West, Ethnic
Strife Becomes 'Terrorism'
By Philip P. Pan
Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, July 15, 2002; Page A12
KUQA, China -- As the first rays of dawn moved across
the Taklimakan Desert, the police chief in this
ancient oasis city in China's far western stretches
led a squad of officers toward a peasant home believed
to be a hideout for Muslim separatists.
Suddenly, a shot rang out and a bullet fired from the
house struck the chief in the stomach. His officers
returned fire, setting off a furious gun battle that
lasted several minutes. By the time the shooting
stopped last August, local officials said, three men
in the house had been killed and the chief, Chen Ping,
lay dead, too.
Police found explosives and guns in a tunnel
underneath the house, identified the men inside as
ethnic Uighurs and concluded that others had escaped.
Determined to respond forcefully, the government
deployed military police to Kuqa in the following
weeks and, according to residents and officials,
ordered sweeps of Uighur neighborhoods to round up
suspects.
"A lot of people were involved. We caught most of them,
executed some of them," said a local police official,
who asked not to be identified. "The situation in Kuqa
is complex. The three evil forces -- violent
terrorists, religious extremists and 'splittists' --
are fairly strong here."
The Chinese government has portrayed the clash as part
of its own war on terrorism, a campaign to crush what
it describes as a violent, organized separatist
movement in Xinjiang province. It says the separatists
are backed by Osama bin Laden and other militants
abroad, and it has sought help from the United States
and other nations to fight them.
But a more complicated picture of the situation in
Xinjiang emerged during a government-guided trip
through the province, from the capital, Urumqi, to
five oasis cities on the ancient Silk Road. Although
residents reported scattered incidents of violence,
the region seemed beset less by a coordinated
terrorist campaign than by simmering ethnic tensions,
made more acute by government policies.
In dozens of interviews with residents, it was
apparent that heavy-handed security tactics and uneven
economic development are aggravating relations between
Xinjiang's 7 million Han, the dominant Chinese ethnic
group, and its 8 million Uighurs, Turkic-speaking
Muslims, many of whom yearn for independence or at
least greater autonomy from Chinese rule. In
dozens of interviews with residents, it was apparent
that heavy-handed security tactics and uneven economic
development are aggravating relations between
Xinjiang's 7 million Han, the dominant Chinese ethnic
group, and its 8 million Uighurs, Turkic-speaking
Muslims, many of whom yearn for independence or at
least greater autonomy from Chinese rule.
At stake is the stability of the country's largest
and westernmost province, a vast expanse of deserts,
mountains and valleys bordering Central Asia that is
home to key military posts and rich deposits of oil,
minerals and natural gas.
The tensions are obvious here in Kuqa, where most
Han live in new apartment buildings and most Uighurs
live in dilapidated, shack-like homes in the city's
old quarter. Walk through town asking about the death
of Chen, the police chief, and the opinions break
largely along ethnic lines.
To many Han, the chief was a martyr and the men who
shot him were religious fanatics intent on killing
innocent people. "He was a hero who died defending the
country," said Liu Jianjiang, a local journalist. "It
was such a tragedy. We all mourned with his wife and
his son."
But in nervous conversations held out of earshot of
the government agents who were trailing foreign
reporters, Uighur residents expressed little sympathy
for Chen or his family. Some argued that Chinese
security forces had arrested and executed so many
Uighurs to maintain control of Xinjiang that the death
of a Han police official was cause for celebration.
"Many people here have been rounded up and shot.
Some are terrorists. Some aren't," whispered one
Uighur shopkeeper, after ushering a reporter into a
dressing room and drawing the curtain. "I know an
innocent boy who was accused of terrorism who was
killed by the Chinese. He was innocent. . . . The
situation is terrible."
"When the police chief was killed, everybody was
talking about it, and many people were happy," said
another Kuqa resident, who asked to be identified only
as a Muslim.
Uighur resistance to Han rule has a long history in
Xinjiang, portions of which have also been controlled
by Arabs, Mongols, Russians, Kazakhs and Tibetans over
the centuries. China's emperors exercised power in the
region as early as 200 B.C., but their grip on the
territory waxed and waned with the rise and fall of
dynasties.
Uighurs established a kingdom here in the late 8th
century and controlled various areas until Genghis
Khan's conquest nearly 500 years later. During the
turbulent years before the Communist revolution,
Uighurs founded two short-lived republics using the
name East Turkestan, first in 1933 in Kashgar, and
then in 1944 in the Yili Valley with the help of
Soviet agents.
When the Communists took power in 1949, they
promised autonomy for Xinjiang and were welcomed by
many Uighurs, who made up 75 percent of the province's
population. Several of the Yili regime's leaders
joined the new government. But the promise of autonomy
was never fulfilled, and there have been serious
ethnic uprisings in Xinjiang every decade since.
It was only after Sept. 11 that China began
releasing large amounts of information about
separatist violence in Xinjiang, part of an effort to
present itself as a partner in the U.S.-led war on
terrorism and justify the tactics it uses to crush
Uighur dissent.
Government officials said bin Laden trained 1,000
Uighurs in Afghanistan and funneled money and arms to
Uighurs in China. The government also produced a long
list of violent incidents it blames on terrorists,
including bombings and assassinations. Most of the
incidents occurred several years ago. Beijing has
presented little evidence to support its claim that
they were carried out by terrorist cells taking orders
from Muslim radicals abroad.
Pressed to provide examples of terrorist attacks in
Xinjiang in the past two years, provincial leaders
interviewed during the trip cited three incidents: the
murders of a local official and his wife in Kashgar in
February 2001; the Aug. 7 shootout in Kuqa; and the
fatal stabbing in May of a school principal in Hotan
by a man who advocated creation of an Islamic state.
Local police officials acknowledged they had no
evidence tying suspects in these cases to terrorist
groups. Western diplomats and exiled Uighur activists
who monitor Xinjiang said many of the attacks that
China has blamed on terrorist cells are better
described as violent crimes committed by young,
frustrated Uighur men.
For example, one diplomat who investigated the
Hotan stabbing said the assailant was a disgruntled
Uighur teacher who had been fired during a "patriotic
education" campaign aimed at ensuring loyalty among
the school's faculty.
As for the men in Kuqa, an exiled Uighur activist
who once served in the Chinese military said his
sources indicated the men planned to storm a
government building and raise a Uighur flag. But he
said there was no evidence they had links to any
terrorist groups.
"Basically, it was a few guys who came up with a
plan. They didn't have ties to me, to other Uighur
exiles or to Osama bin Laden," said the activist,
Dilxat Raxit, of the pro-independence East Turkestan
Information Center.
Human rights groups accuse Beijing of exaggerating
the terrorist threat and using the global war on
terrorism to justify its harsh suppression of Uighurs
in Xinjiang -- the only place in China where people
are executed for political crimes, according to
Amnesty International.
Several Uighur residents interviewed said they were
more afraid of police than terrorists. "Since
September 11, the situation has gotten worse," said
one cab driver in Aksu, a city west of Kuqa where
Uighur militants and police clashed two years ago. "The
police are everywhere, and they pay Uighurs to spy in
every neighborhood and every mosque. . . . Sometimes,
people just disappear."
But many Han residents said they supported tougher
police measures against their Uighur neighbors. "You
have to watch them very carefully. A lot of them hate
us, you know," said one worker, a native of Sichuan
province who moved to Kuqa nearly a decade ago. "We
have to suppress them. There's no other choice."
Local officials said the U.S.-led war in
Afghanistan has weakened terrorist groups in Xinjiang.
Still, they acknowledged putting a "greater emphasis"
since Sept. 11 on fighting terrorism and reported
stopping six groups of Uighurs from committing
terrorist acts in the past year.
Officials declined to provide details, but Uighur
exile organizations estimate more than 3,000 people
have been detained since Sept. 11. In Bayinguolen
prefecture, Xinjiang's largest, police arrested 211
separatists in the past year, said Zhang Zhiheng, the
Communist Party secretary there.
Asked why Uighurs would resort to terrorism, Wang
Lequan, the Communist Party chief in Xinjiang, said
they were motivated by political goals: independence
for Xinjiang and the establishment of an Islamic state.
He also said there was no legal way for Uighurs to
pursue those goals peacefully in China.
"Those who are asking for the independence of
Xinjiang are not popular and don't represent all the
ethnic groups. Therefore, they are not allowed to do
so," he said.
Liu Yaohua, Xinjiang's deputy director of public
security, said any Uighur who advocated independence
for Xinjiang was probably a terrorist. "They are
closely connected. . . . Ethnic separatism is their
goal, religious extremism is their garb, and terrorist
acts are their means," he said.
Other local officials said Uighurs were drawn to
terrorism because of poverty in Xinjiang, pointing out
that ethnic violence was most common in the less
developed southern portion of the province. They said
a campaign launched by Beijing last year to develop
Xinjiang and the rest of the Chinese west would reduce
support for independence among Uighurs.
So far, though, the results have been mixed. Some
Uighur residents applauded the campaign, saying
infrastructure projects have boosted the economy. But
others complained that development has resulted in a
huge influx of Han Chinese to Xinjiang, and that they
were getting most of the new jobs.
© 2002 The
Washington Post Company
|