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Xinjiang Province: News & Discussions

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Where did China get involved? Look, the article is written by an Indian that is educated in US and published in a western newspaper. China has nothing to do with it.
Shooting the messenger won't help
 
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I think coz they come to know that muslim helping kafirs(american) are not real muslims.
So what about turkey? They are also Muslims and helping America in war against terror. Then why aren't they attacking them? Why are they attacking only Pakistanis.
 
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So what about turkey? They are also Muslims and helping America in war against terror. Then why aren't they attacking them?
Ask your countryman who still believe that they are warrior of allah.....it's more about confused ideology man nothing else....stop hiding others crime under religious propaganda otherwise it will haunt you in future. Backing religious extremist group is no good for any country who has more than one religion in it.
 
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China will require identification from passengers buying long-distance bus tickets in far-western Xinjiang, state media said on Wednesday, as police seek to monitor travel in a region beset by violence.

Authorities, nervous about unrest in the region which is home to the Muslim Uighur minority group, have already introduced airline-like restrictions for city buses in the capital Urumqi - banning passengers from carrying onboard cigarette lighters, water and yogurt.

Beginning in September, passengers must present official identification to buy tickets at 119 bus stations in Xinjiang, the official Xinhua news agency said, citing a public security announcement.

"Passengers' ID and bus information will be printed on the tickets and also be uploaded to local police authorities," Xinhua said, adding that tickets would be checked for matching information.

China requires real-name registration for buying train tickets around the country, but rules for long-distance buses, widely used as a form of cheap transport, typically have been more relaxed.

The government has blamed a string of recent attacks in Xinjiang on Islamist militants and separatists it says are bent on establishing an independent state called East Turkestan.

Rights advocates say heavy-handed policies there, including restrictions on Islam and the Uighur people's culture and language, have contributed to unrest.

The Xinjiang city of Karamay has temporarily banned people with head scarves, veils and long beards from boarding buses, a policy critics have said openly discriminates against Uighurs.

Hundreds have died in unrest in Xinjiang in the past year and a half, but tight security makes it almost impossible for journalists to make independent assessments of the violence.

About 100 people were killed when knife-wielding attackers staged assaults in two towns in the region's south in late July, state media said, including 59 "terrorists" shot dead by police. A suicide bombing killed 39 people at a market in Urumqi in May.
 
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Terrorists executed in Xinjiang

Eight convicted ‪#‎terrorists‬ in ‪#‎Xinjiang‬ were executed on Saturday after their sentences were approved by China’ Supreme People’s Court.

The eight were found guilty of ‪#‎crimes‬ including organizing, leading and participating in terrorist groups, murder, arson, and illegal manufacture, storage and transportation of explosives.

Three had been convicted of taking part in last summer’s Tiananmen Square terrorist attack in Beijing, when a vehicle plowed through the iconic square into a crowd, killing three ‪#‎civilians‬ and injuring 39 others.

The other five had been involved in terrorist ‪#‎attacks‬ in different parts of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.

The ‪#‎Chinese‬ government says the executions represent the upholding of justice, and demonstrate their resolution to crack down on ‪#‎terrorism‬.


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By William Wan and Xu Yangjingjing August 25 at 12:51 PM

BEIJING — At a time when the restive region of Xinjiang has witnessed executions of alleged separatists, knife attacks on train passengers, and clashes between the Chinese government and forces it has identified as Muslim extremists, a film company believes that it has the answer: a cartoon princess.

With the encouragement of the authorities, a Chinese animation company is turning to a Disney-like character for help in bringing ethnic Uighurs and Han Chinese together.

“Princess Fragrant” is a 104-episode show based on the historic figure Ipal Khan.

In a phone interview, its creators said they think the story of a princess from the Uighur Muslim minority who married a Chinese emperor in the 18th century could ease the ill will on both sides — or at least begin that process with the next generation.

For years, some Uighurs and other Muslim minorities in Xinjiang have agitated against China’s authoritarian government. Their anger is a reaction, Uighur groups say, to oppressive official policies, religious restrictions and widespread discrimination.

Meanwhile, the government has presented its increasingly severe crackdowns as counterterrorism measures against rising extremism.

Since August 2013, the animation company Shenzhen Qianheng Cultural Communications has spent more than $3 million producing the 3-D princess cartoon, which will air next year in Mandarin and Uighur.

The company, based far from Xinjiang in the southern city of Shenzhen, is taking part in a government program that pairs 13 inland Chinese cities with cities in far-western Xinjiang in an effort to spur development.

Deng Jiangwei, director of the cartoon, said the animators chose to focus on Princess Fragrant — rendered with classic Disney-pixie cuteness and wide-eyed innocence — because of her historic contributions to ethnic unity and stability. She remains highly regarded in both Uighur and Han Chinese societies.

“Ethnic epic of splendor,” touts one poster.

In the cartoon, Princess Fragrant and her friends set out on an adventure to find her father, who was abducted by “evil forces” from the West. The villain was after a family heirloom, which turns out to be spiritual rather than monetary.

The company approached the Kashgar government last year with the idea. A supposed tomb of Princess Fragrant is one of the major tourist attractions in the city of Kashgar, even though historians doubt she is buried there.

Government officials eagerly welcomed the idea and promised funding, but the company has not yet received state financial support, Deng said. The company set up offices in Kashgar, and one-third of the employees there are Uighurs.

But tackling such a divisive relationship proved difficult, even in the imaginary world of cartoons.

Most members of the design team in Shenzhen are Han Chinese, although for the cartoon they traveled in Xinjiang in an attempt to better understand its culture and history, and local experts were included to correct errors in their work, Deng said.

Deng said they had to avoid making too many references to Islam in the cartoon, even though Princess Fragrant was a Uighur.

“We cannot promote religion in our work, but we do refer to some aspects of the Islamic culture, such as etiquette, things that are easily acceptable to most people,” Deng said.

He described their challenge as finding a balance between authentic Islamic culture and an entertaining story.

Despite their overt political aim, the producers said, they tried not to get too preachy in the message.

“It’s about family and growing up,” Deng said.

The princess is not the first cartoon character called upon to promote ethnic unity. Last year, Xinjiang children were treated to the TV series “Legend of Loulan,” about an ancient kingdom swallowed by shifting sands. It featured characters of different ethnicities banding together to beat a sand monster and save the kingdom.

Huang Zhiyong, who directed the Loulan series, said: “Kids are impressionable, and they like to imitate. Things they see on TV can greatly influence their values.”

The show aired last year in Mandarin only — a notable fact in the face of Uighur accusations that the government is trying to replace their traditions and language with Chinese ones. Huang said it is now in the process of being dubbed in Uighur.

Chinese animators hope cartoon princess can help ease ethnic tensions in Xinjiang - The Washington Post
 
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Local input crucial in developing bonds to resist terror in southern Xinjiang

By Xu Weihong

Due to violent terrorist attacks, problems in Xinjiang have become the focus of both domestic and foreign opinion.

Domestic research institutes and experts have provided suggestions to the local government. But after I spent months in southern Xinjiang, I found that in order to boost development in Xinjiang, we should start from the deep-rooted problems and think of innovative and pragmatic means.

In a bid to improve governance and boost development of Xinjiang, we should deeply understand the basic needs in southern Xinjiang. Some development proposals raised by a number of experts and prominent economists are reasonable, but when it comes to southern Xinjiang, the actual situation at the grass-roots level must be taken into consideration.

Officials at the county and township level there admit that although the ideas of some experts sound perfect, they would be difficult to implement.

The social and production structure of southern Xinjiang differs greatly from that in the coastal areas and even northern Xinjiang.

The coastal areas have entered a post-industrialization and information era, and northern Xinjiang is heading toward heavy-industrialization. However, southern Xinjiang is still heavily dependent on agriculture. It would not be practical to simply copy the development model of the coastal areas and promote manufacturing industries in this region.

In my field research in southern Xinjiang, I discovered that many villages adopted a practical way to connect ordinary people with the Party's "mass-line" campaign.

For example, some extreme doctrines of Islamism do not allow the singing and dancing gatherings of the Uyghurs. In Langan town, the Party committee and the government built cultural squares in each village and encouraged villagers to take part in entertainment activities.

To carry out work at the grass-roots level of southern Xinjiang, we should rely on Party officials at the front line. With more terrorist attacks emerging, the local government has set up a watch post in each village.

But due to a lack of financing, villagers do not want to be on duty every day. The Party authorities at the township level then bought billiard tables for every village, so that young people will not feel bored when on duty.

In Langan town, every official has a notebook which records the important events of families that they hold responsibility for. These officials attend ceremonies of local families like wedding and funeral, so that villagers feel they are close to officials. In southern Xinjiang which still relies on agriculture, traditional "mass-line" work continues to play a critical role.

The author is vice secretary-general of Chongqing Financial Association. opinion@globaltimes.com.cn
 
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China: Xinjiang hopes to win hearts with new cartoon - CNN.com

China's restive far west hopes to win hearts with 'Princess Fragrant' cartoon
By Sophie Brown and Serena Dong , CNN
August 26, 2014 -- Updated 0934 GMT (1734 HKT)
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Hong Kong (CNN)
-- China has struggled to contain ethnic tensions in the far northwest region of Xinjiang, recently launching a crackdown after a series of violent attacks left hundreds dead in recent months.

But authorities think they may have found a new tonic to mend the cultural differences between the region's indigenous Uyghurs -- a mostly Muslim, Turkic-speaking group -- and China's dominant ethnic group, the Han Chinese.

Her name is Ipal Khan. The wide-eyed Uyghur beauty is the protagonist of an upcoming cartoon based on the well-known tale of a girl from the city of Kashgar who captivated China's Qianlong Emperor with her good looks and sweet fragrance in the 18th century and became his concubine.

According to the legend most Chinese are familiar with, the girl fell in love with the emperor and became his cherished consort.

"She is a figure that has contributed much to cross-cultural communication," Deng Jianglei, director of the cartoon, "Princess Fragrant," told CNN. The animation is set to become a television series at the end of 2015, and a film the following year.

Deng's company, Shenzhen Qianheng Cultural Communication Company, won a tender to create the 3-D animation last year, as part of a campaign by Xinjiang authorities to promote social harmony among China's different ethnic groups and raise awareness of the folk customs of the Uyghurs.

During a visit to the province in June, Deng and his colleagues were inspired by the natural beauty and rich culture of Xinjiang -- a region the size of Iran that shares borders with eight countries.

"The cultures there and the folk arts are exquisite. But the place's economy is less developed. So we wanted ... to help them promote their cultures," he said.

But appealing to both Han and Uyghur audiences may prove a challenge.

Princess or sex slave?

Selecting a musician to compose the theme song, for example, took over a year, China's Global Times reports, because it was difficult to find a composer who was familiar with both Han and Uyghur traditions.

Then there are the alternative versions of the Uyghur girl's story.

Although the legend of Fragrant Concubine has become a symbol of national unity for many Chinese, modern Uyghur interpretations of the tale portray her as an imperial sex slave who was murdered by the emperor's mother after stubbornly rejecting the emperor's advances.

Deng said he wants the series to be entertaining while also fulfilling "political needs."

"(The cartoon) is a re-understanding of the friendship between Han and Uyghurs, which is especially significant to the re-education of the children and teaching them to accept different cultures."

His animation company, working in collaboration with the government of Kashgar, has plans to show the cartoon in China and abroad, especially in Islamic regions.

Xinjiang has a long history of ethnic unrest. Some Uyghurs have expressed resentment toward the Han Chinese in recent years over what they say is harsh treatment by security forces, discrimination and a lack of economic opportunities.

Muslim separatists have been held responsible for a series of recent deadly attacks, with Chinese authorities launching an anti-terror campaign in May. Measures to end the violence have ranged from executing convicted terrorists to banning beards and Islamic dress in some areas.

But authorities have not ignored the role of soft power.

"It is similar as fighting a war in the realm of ideology. If we don't pass on positive energy, the opposite side would occupy the battlefield," Sheng Jun, a deputy director of cultural industry office at the Xinjiang Bureau of Culture told The Global Times.

Finding common ground, however, was difficult even among the animators.

Some of the more conservative Xinjiang artists who were consulted in the making of the cartoon objected to the use of animal characters because of the negative connotations associated with some creatures like snakes according to Islamic traditions, and because Uyghur families rarely own pets, the Global Times reports.

"The difficulty is that you have to respect history and culture while catering to the market," Deng said.

When it came to the animals, Deng insisted they should stay. "It's all about compromise," he said.
 
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