Thursday, March 1, 2012

“China’s Restive Xinjiang” Erupts (Again)

From Winds of Jihad:


“China’s Restive Xinjiang” Erupts (Again)

by SHEIKYERMAMI on FEBRUARY 29, 2012

China smokes 12  in Xinjiang riot

“The government has failed to win over Uighurs”- note the spin from the Globe & Mail journo, for whom it is wholly inconceivable that  Koranimals could have failed to integrate, or to win over the Chinese majority. Its just like saying ‘little Anny Fanny has failed to tame her rattlesnake, and now she’s dead”.
Thanks to Vlad and TT:
At least 12 people were killed in riots Tuesday in China’s restive northwestern region of Xinjiang, state media reported.
No details were given about what might have set off the violence near the city of Kashgar, although Xinjiang sees periodic outbreaks of anti-government violence by members of the region’s native Turkish Muslim Uighur ethnic group.
The government has failed to win over Uighurs and other ethnic minorities through policies to boost economic growth and incomes as it increases police presence and controls religious practices to deter displays of separatism.
Full post below the fold
At least 12 people were killed in riots Tuesday in China’s restive northwestern region of Xinjiang, state media reported.
No details were given about what might have set off the violence near the city of Kashgar, although Xinjiang sees periodic outbreaks of anti-government violence by members of the region’s native Turkish Muslim Uighur ethnic group.






The government has failed to win over Uighurs and other ethnic minorities through policies to boost economic growth and incomes as it increases police presence and controls religious practices to deter displays of separatism. China’s ethnic Tibetan regions have also been unsettled in recent months by scattered demonstrations and clashes with authorities, as well as monks and nuns setting themselves on fire in protest against the government’s policies.
Tuesday’s attacks come at a sensitive time. The national legislature’s annual session opens next week, and security is being tightened across the country.
The Xinhua News Agency said rioters armed with knives attacked victims in Yecheng county outside the city starting at about 6 p.m. They killed 10 people and police shot two assailants to death, the report said.
Xinhua said police were chasing others involved in the attacks but did not say how many suspects there were.
The report could not be independently confirmed. Calls to government and police offices in Kashgar and at Xinjiang regional headquarters in Kashgar rang unanswered Tuesday night.
Dilxat Raxit, a spokesman for the German-based World Uyghur Congress, said that local Uighurs told him seven armed Chinese security personnel were killed and three people were shot to death. He said 10 people were injured, two of them seriously, and police have detained 84 people. Police have sealed off the area, he said.
The spokesman said the violence erupted because Uighurs “could no longer bear China’s systematic repression,” and have been denied outlets for peaceful protest.
Periodic attacks occur in Xinjiang despite a smothering security presence imposed following 2009 riots in the regional capital of Urumqi that left almost 200 people dead. The riots pitted Uighurs against migrants from China’s majority Han.
Xinjiang saw more deadly violence last summer, when a group of Uighurs stormed a police station in the city of Hotan on July 18 and took hostages, killing four. On July 30 and 31, Uighurs in Kashgar hijacked a truck, set a restaurant on fire and stabbed people in the street. Authorities said 14 of the attackers were shot by police in Hotan, and five assailants were killed in the violence in Kashgar.
China says those events were organized terror attacks, but an overseas Uighur rights group says they were anti-government riots carried out by angry citizens. Uighur activists and security analysts blame the violence on economic marginalization and restrictions on Uighur culture and the Muslim religion that are breeding frustration and anger among young Uighurs.
Chinese authorities have offered little evidence to back up their claims of outside involvement and rarely provide details on arrests or punishment of the suspects. Tight information controls and the remoteness of the area, more than 3,500 kilometres west of Beijing, ensure that the circumstances surrounding such incidents often remain murky.

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