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Uighur Press on Eastern Turkestan |
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China's Muslim
Problem
October 23, 2008
By Kathy Shaidle
FrontPageMagazine.com
On October 21, a U.S. Court of Appeals moved to
block the immediate release of 17 Chinese Muslims
from Guantanamo Bay (1), overturning a federal
judge's order this June to set the men free after
seven years in detention. The legal controversy
surrounding their detention serves as an occasion
to reflect on the status of China's Muslim Uighur
minority, which makes up an estimated 1 to 2
percent of the China's population, and which
remains little-understood in the West.
First and foremost, the Chinese government
considers the country's 8.5 million Uighurs a
threat to national security. Earlier this week,
for instance, Chinese authorities declared that
most of its domestic Muslim terrorists - that is,
the Uighur - have close ties with similar groups
operating base camps in Pakistan, which borders
China's northwest Xinjiang province.
Also this week, the Chinese government issued mug
shots of eight Uighurs suspected in attacks prior
to this summer's Beijing Olympics, when Uighur
separatists struck Chinese targets over a dozen
times. Those attacks included a brazen assault on
a police station that left sixteen officers dead.
All the suspects are alleged members of the East
Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM), which the U.N.
says is a terrorist group linked to al-Qaeda.
Rohan Gunaratna, who heads the Singapore-based
International Centre for Political Violence and
Terrorism Research, recently said that there is
overwhelming evidence that Uighur terrorists are
being trained at ETIM camps in Pakistan and
Afghanistan. Gunaratna reports that a village
"exclusively for the Uighurs" has been built in
the White Mountains of Afghanistan near Jalalabad
and the Pakistan border.
These warnings underscore China's mutually
suspicious relationship with its Uighur minority.
Residing in the north-west Chinese province of
Xinjiang, the Uighur's are Turkic Muslims. Their
language is closer to Turkish than to Chinese, and
their women often wear burkas. The Uighurs have
never accepted Communist rule, so a cycle of
sporadic unrest and subsequent crackdowns by
Chinese authorities has persisted for decades. Of
these the most recent came after the August
Olympics, when the Chinese government waited until
the Western media had decamped to crack down on
the Uighurs.
The government's suspicions of the Muslims in its
midst have been heightened by the Uighur's ties to
radical Islamic groups and charities. Out of
concerns that Xinjiang's mosques have been
financed by Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, Chinese
authorities have closely monitored Uighur places
of worship.
This year, during the Muslim holy month of
Ramadan, the government implemented strict rules
governing all aspects of Uighur religious life.
Henceforth, according to a recent report out of
Xinjiang province, "official versions" of the
Koran will be the only legal ones; imams will be
barred from teaching the Koran in private; the
study of Arabic will be allowed only at special
government schools; and Muslim students and
government workers will be "compelled to eat"
during the Ramadan fast. Those Uighurs wishing to
make the hajj, the annual Muslim pilgrimage to
Mecca in Saudi Arabia, will be obligated to do so
through government-run tours that are virtually
unaffordable to the average Chinese Muslim.
Not surprisingly, the nation's "official" Muslim
spokesmen have tried to put their co-religionists'
situation in the most positive light. Chen
Guangyuan, the president of the China Islamic
Association, has claimed that Muslims in the
country are enjoying a religious renewal.
"Governments at various levels have attached great
importance to religious issues, and have
implemented financial policies to assist their
development," Chen has said. In his role as a
government representative, Chen could hardly
suggest otherwise.
Official repression is just one source of the
tension between China and its Muslim minority.
Another can be found in the Uighurs' native
Xinjiang province, which they share, in varying
states of unease, with an almost equal number of
Han Chinese. China's dominant ethnic group, the
Han have a different language and religion than
the Uighurs and view their Muslim neighbors with
suspicion. "The Uighurs are lazy," one Han
businessman was quoted as saying in the
International Herald Tribune. "It's because of
their religion. They spend so much time praying.
What are they praying for?" For their part, the
Uighur have tended to see the Han as agents of the
Chinese government. For instance, the Uighur
accuse Beijing of encouraging Han settlement in
Xinjiang as an intimidation tactic.
No one familiar with China's oppression of Tibetan
Buddhists and followers of the Falun Gong
religious group will be surprised by its
repressive treatment of the Uighurs. The
discomforting question, however, is whether the
government's serial crackdowns are justified by
the very real threat of Islamic terrorism.
Opinions differ. Groups like Human Rights Watch
insist that the Uighur are blameless. They equate
Uighur separatism with the peaceful Tibetan
struggle for independence. But others are
skeptical. Robert Spencer of JihadWatch urges
skepticism toward Uighur groups' claims that they
"don't espouse violence." "They don't espouse
violence. They espouse Sharia," Spencer observes.
"Does China want to live under Sharia?"
This prospect seems highly unlikely, to be sure,
since the Chinese government is crippled by no
moral qualms about how to respond to terrorism.
The Chinese Muslims being held in Guantanamo Bay
would have been tortured and killed long ago had
they been captured by the Chinese instead of the
Americans. In fact, this was the main argument
against repatriating them to China after all these
years.
Still, the Guantanamo detainees' case suggests
that Spencer is right to caution against romantic
depictions of Uighurs as noble victims of Chinese
oppression. Although they are not considered a
threat to the United States, the Uighurs at
Guantanamo are suspected members of the ETIM
terror group and reportedly received weapons
training in Afghanistan. That fact does not
justify all of the repressive measures that China
has taken against its Muslim minority, but it does
indicate that Chinese suspicions about their
Islamic countrymen are not entirely unjustified.
http://www.rightsidenews.com/200810232321/global-terrorism/china-s-muslim-problem.html
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