So say residents of the 1.6
million-square-kilometer (620,000 square mile) area in
the far west which borders eight largely Muslim
Central and South Asian nations and once made up the
central portion of the legendary Silk Road.
Since a series of bombings and protests culminated
in violent and deadly riots in the city of Yining in
1997, Beijing has clamped down on all religious and
cultural undertakings by the majority Uighur Muslim
population.
The all pervasive "strike hard" campaign against
separatism and extremism has succeeded in ending
ethnic violence, but at the expense of people's rights,
they say.
"The Chinese are putting far too much pressure on
society," says an unemployed Uighur accountant in the
regional capital of Urumqi, who only identifies
herself as Rozhana.
"You cannot discuss politics publicly, you can
hardly have any group meetings with friends without
the Chinese suspecting that you are trying to
overthrow them."
With a population of some 19 million people,
including eight million Uighur Muslims, residents say
the crackdown has meant interaction between the
Uighurs and the increasingly numerous Han Chinese is
kept to a minimum.
"You only have to say 'down with Mao Zedong, down
with the Communist Party,' and the party will arrest
you and execute you immediately," Hakim, a young
Uighur cab driver in the trading center of Kashgar,
says as he drives by a huge statue of revolutionary
leader Mao.
"They are always arresting people, so everyone is
afraid to say anything against the Chinese."
Zhang Xinping, a 50-year-old Chinese businessman
who was born in Kashgar and who can speak the Turkish
Uighur language, says he has long been despondent
about the treatment of Uighurs.
But the government's efforts to oppose terrorism
meant that the immigrant population of Chinese had
more reason to dislike or look down upon them.
"I think that the Han Chinese coming to Kashgar
should learn the Uighur language, but they are
incapable of this," Zhang tells AFP.
"This is part of the problem here. If the Chinese
made a little more effort to respect the Uighur
culture then things would be better. The Chinese just
don't have the habit of treating them better."
The crackdown became more severe after Muslim
extremists carried out the September 11, 2001
terrorist attacks on the United States, further
sharpening racial tensions amid a huge influx of Han
Chinese entering the region as part of the
government's effort to revitalize its west through
economic development.
A 114-page report issued last week by two US rights
groups highlighted the crushing campaign of religious
repression being carried out against the Uighurs in
the name of anti-separatism and counter-terrorism.
Penned by Human Rights Watch and Human Rights in
China, it outlined how China denies Uighurs religious
freedom, and by extension freedom of association,
assembly, and expression.
"The worldwide campaign against terrorism has given
Beijing the perfect excuse to crackdown harder than
ever in Xinjiang," says Brad Adams, Asia director for
Human Rights Watch.
"Other Chinese enjoy a growing freedom to worship,
but the Uighurs, like the Tibetans, find that their
religion is being used as a tool of control."
China denies this.
Pan Zhiping, a leading expert on racial issues at
the Xinjiang Academy of Social Sciences, says the
strike-hard campaign appears to be working.
"After the September 11 terrorist attacks (on the
United States), the government very openly and clearly
stated its opposition to separatism, religious
extremism and terrorism," he tells AFP.
"Since then the Xinjiang people have become very
clear on this policy.
"Right now Xinjiang is quiet, this has been so
especially after 1997. No one wants to see chaos, no
one wants to see innocent people dying on buses
because of some separatist bomb."
Pan, a Han Chinese who has written books on the
ethnic situation in Xinjiang and called for greater
economic development as the basis for ending ethnic
strife, laments both the rise in racial tensions that
has come with the crackdown and the unlikelihood the
campaign would be lifted anytime soon.
"Xinjiang is not like the rest of China. Here
almost every issue can turn into an ethnic issue, even
an ordinary car accident becomes an ethnic issue if
both Han Chinese and Uighurs are involved," he says.