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The Price of China's Uighur Repression

Anees

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China’s sledgehammer approach to dissent was on display once more this week, when the authorities sentenced the Uighur economist Ilham Tohti to life in prison on Tuesday. The verdict attracted widespread international condemnation and risks further accelerating a vicious circle of repression, discrimination and violence in China’s westernmost region.

Mr. Tohti, a professor at Minzu University in Beijing, was found guilty of “separatism” — the usual charge leveled against nonethnic-Han Chinese, such as Uighurs, Mongols or Tibetans, when they criticize Beijing’s ethnic-minority policies. Mr. Tohti has always stressed his personal opposition to separatism, but according to the prosecution’s tortured logic, this was in fact proof that he was a “covert” separatist.
The real reasons behind Mr. Tohti’s conviction stem from his outspoken efforts to convince the central government to change the course of oppressive policies in his native Xinjiang, which he said were generating more violent resistance among the 10-million-strong mostly Muslim Uighurs.

Occasional violent outbursts have long been a feature of life in the Xinjiang region but the tumult reached unprecedented levels after mass riots in the capital Urumqi in July 2009. Triggered by the suppression of a peaceful demonstration by Uighurs calling for a government inquiry into mistreatment, the turmoil left hundreds of people dead, most of whom were Han Chinese, the country’s dominant ethnicity.

The Chinese government responded with a crackdown on the entire Uighur population, with thousands of indiscriminate arrests, disappearances, widespread use of torture and drastic controls on any form of expression of ethnic identity, including religion. In the last five years, China has in all but name adopted a counterinsurgency model in Xinjiang to wage its “people’s war against separatism.”

But the authorities have little to show for what they call “high-pressure” tactics. Since 2009, violence has been increasing, as more Uighurs are seeking revenge against all things Chinese by mounting spectacular and often suicidal attacks that have included ploughing vehicles into crowds, attacking Han Chinese travelers with knives, detonating bombs and killing local officials or Han Chinese settlers.

The Internet is undoubtedly playing a role in fostering Uighur violence, as it has made a kind of off-the-shelf jihadism available to aggrieved individuals. Websites justify indiscriminate attacks in the name of Islam, provide jihad how-to manuals, and give new “instant converts” a sense of meaning as members of a global jihadi struggle.

But Mr. Tohti was right: The escalation of violence is the direct result of China’s repression. The overwhelming majority of Uighurs are still opposed to violence, and to any form of radical Islamism, which they see as foreign and counter to their moderate way of life. Yet it should surprise no one that as Beijing tightens its grip, more Uighurs are becoming radicalized.


Bejing’s key counterinsurgency goals, aside from military operations, are to identify and remove insurgents or sympathizers, dismantle their networks, and win the general population over through assistance and development. This requires placing the entire population under constant surveillance, strictly controlling their movements, grouping scattered communities into new settlements, tightly regulating the borders and maintaining a close network of informers.

This counterinsurgency model is counterproductive. Beijing faces no organized Uighur insurgency; there isn’t even an organized political opposition. By making everyone a suspect, Beijing’s tactics fuel polarization between Uighurs and Han Chinese.

These repressive policies are not worth the cost in human life and misery they cause. This is what Mr. Tohti was trying to tell the central government, and that’s why the Xinjiang authorities were so keen to have him silenced.

It is not too late. Beijing could reverse the verdict against Mr. Tohti, implement China’s existing regional autonomy laws, and abandon the flawed counterinsurgency model. It has little to lose. After all, while the authorities in Urumqi, where Mr. Tohti has been held since January, were busy manufacturing the case against him, they failed to prevent several deadly attacks, including the most devastating one outside Xinjiang last March, when some 30 people were killed in a Kunming train station.

As Mr. Tohti himself said, changing the course of policies in Xinjiang would not result in Beijing losing control but instead “would be very helpful for protecting the unity of the nation, and the long-term prosperity of the country.”

Nicholas Bequelin is a senior researcher in the Asia Division of Human Rights Watch.


http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/26/o...-tohti-will-radicalize-more-uighurs.html?_r=0
 
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If anything, China has been too soft on terrorism in the past 30 years. That idiot Hu Yaobang allowed religious schools to be rebuilt, when Mao had largely eliminated them. It is time that China revisit its hardline policy once more. Demolish those religious schools, implement mandatory Chinese education and imprison the families of terrorists.
 
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If anything, China has been too soft on terrorism in the past 30 years. That idiot Hu Yaobang allowed religious schools to be rebuilt, when Mao had largely eliminated them. It is time that China revisit its hardline policy once more. Demolish those religious schools, implement mandatory Chinese education and imprison the families of terrorists.

Exactly.

It's the fault of these liberals that have been running China over the past 30 years.
 
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We should have a global perspective. Wherever there is a so-called Islam Revival, I mean any place in the world, terrorist attacks are not far from there. It's kind of destiny that is bound to happen. China is just another example. We can not be immune to the Islamic curse. That's all.
 
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This is a troll article made by US state department front group HRW. But the suggestion that Uighurs will become more radical may hold some truth, and may even be desirable according to one analyst:

China Matters: The Meaning of Ilham Tohti’s Life Sentence

This author suggests "moderates" are most dangerous, because of their slavish devotion to linking their separatism to "human rights and democracy"™, and also Tibet. Instead, radical Islamists are more palatable, especially if they instead link to ISIS, because China would have more leeway and justification to crack down on them. And in fact, the most extreme of extremists will leave for foreign jihad and stop disturbing the state (this is the "Saudi Arabia strategy").
 
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The Uighurs, wiggers, or whatever they are called should be on their knees thanking China for not treating them the same way the Zionists and Westerners committed genocide, widespread destruction, real estate theft, and resource theivery against the Native Americans, Australian aborigines, black Africans, the Palestinians, the Iraqis, the Libyans, the Afghanis, the Syrians, the Vietnamese, North Korea, etc. Then the Zionists and Westerners created endless propaganda about their superior liberation and superior human rights.
 
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The Uighurs, wiggers, or whatever they are called should be on their knees thanking China for not treating them the same way the Zionists and Westerners committed genocide, widespread destruction, real estate theft, and resource theivery against the Native Americans, Australian aborigines, black Africans, the Palestinians, the Iraqis, the Libyans, the Afghanis, the Syrians, the Vietnamese, North Korea, etc. Then the Zionists and Westerners created endless propaganda about their superior liberation and superior human rights.

Didn't you know? Commit as much genocide as you want. Benefit from the blood, sweat, tears, and resources of the native's land. Bring in unwilling workers to farm those lands until their deaths. It's all in the name of "freedom." And 300 years later when you've become rich and powerful, you can give a half-hearted apology to the remnants of a devastated native culture whose land and people you've raped into oblivion, give them a casino or two, and voila, you're now a champion of human rights and democracy. And then you have the moral high ground to point fingers at everyone else who doesn't look or think like you. :hitwall:
 
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You suggest that we should do nothing and let Xinjiang turn into another Afganistan and move those han people out of xinjiang?You think we are that stupid?

They can't. Uighur will never able to do anything significant with their struggle. Because their problem is locally, and their number is very small. Compared to the whole Chinese people, 10 million is very insignificant. Even with the help of foreign countries, they won't success.
 
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Western media: China is dealing with a microscopic number of individual extremist irrelevant of their ethnicity and they spin it into "repression" of all Uighurs, in order to spur and promote ethnic segregation. Sick people.
 
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The Chinese government has never made a single statement singling out the Uighurs. Every time it talks about Xinjian issues it has always been "Xinjian separationists". It is pretty much western media that instantly links Uighurs with terrorists and a number of other derogatory terms.
 
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