There
are regions in the world like Pakistani province of
Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa,
which remain politically unsettled and trouble can flare up there at
any moment on any day. There are also some regions, which are
politically stable, yet a turmoil can happen their at a slightest
pretext. China's western autonomous region of Xinjiang is one such
dangerous area. It is home to an ethnic Muslim minority called
Uighurs, who are a Turkic-speaking people who regard themselves as
culturally and ethnically close to central Asia, despite a long
history of Chinese rule there. The Chinese Communist Party gained
control over the region in 1949. In 1955, it was declared an
autonomous region, giving it a status on the paper, similar to that
of Tibet.
Politically,
Xinjiang can be called as a cross road, because it shares borders
with Mongolia, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan,
Afghanistan, Pakistan and India. Over the decades, Chinese Government
has encouraged large scale migration of Han Chinese migrants to the
region, displacing Uighurs from their traditional lands and fueling
tensions. There are more than eight million Han Chinese in Xinjiang
against 10 million Uighurs. The newcomers take most of the new jobs,
and unemployment among Uighurs is high. There is wide spread
resentment against discrimination and harsh treatment by security
forces, despite official promises of equal rights and ethnic harmony.
Some of the Uighurs even want outright separation from China and
want Xinjiang region to become an independent country called “East
Turkestan.”
The
simmering tensions between Uighurs and Han Chinese have erupted into
riots in last decade. In July 2009, rioting killed some 200 people
and injured 1,700. In July last year (2013), 35 people were killed
in a town. Renewed protests last year also turned violent and are
believed to have claimed more than 100 lives. Hundreds are believed
to have died in recent years, but the violence has always been
restricted to Xinjiang region only.
However
in October last year, when a jeep veered into a crowd in Beijing’s
iconic Tiananmen Square, and then crashed and burst into flames,
killing five people, Chinese declared immediately, that it was work
the work of terrorists from Xinjiang, and within 10 hours of the
crash, authorities had arrested five suspects in a night raid who
were in possession of long knives and flags calling for “jihad.”
Many international analysts think that China has found it useful to
blame ethnic tensions on any act of terrorism to gain sympathies at
home though we shall never know the truth. Incidents involving
Uighurs are always labelled as “terrorist attacks” by Chinese
authorities, although the description is rarely used for incidents
carried out by members of the Han majority, who may have some
grievances against society or the state to settle and have resorted
to violence.
Yunnan
is the southwest province of China, bordering with Myanmar, Laos and
Thailand. It is more of a tropical region with a lush green cover. It
is also one of the most beautiful regions of China and is the home of
the famous Chinese Tea, which is grown in the hilly region around
state capital Kunming- also is a popular tourist destination in
China. Yunnan is a peaceful region and has no history of any violent
clashes between locals and security forces. Yunnan also happens to be
1600 Km away from troubled Xinjiang region.
On the
night of March 1 2014, a group of men carrying weapons burst into
the Kunming train station plaza and the ticket hall. The armed
assailants dressed in black, launched a blistering attack with long
knives and started slashing indiscriminately, the innocent people
queuing to buy Railway tickets. Police teams were called for and
they started shooting the assailants. Police shot dead at least four
attackers, but by the time assailants disappeared, 29 people were
lying dead and more than 130 were wounded. Photos posted on Sina
Weibo — a Chinese version of Twitter — showed blood spattered
across the station floor and medical staff crouching over bodies
lying on the ground along with images of spectacles, shoes and
baggage strewn across the floor of the waiting room behind police
tape. Chinese state media are calling the incident as China's 9/11.
Within
few hours, The Kunming city government issued a statement saying that
the attack was orchestrated by separatists from the northwest region
of Xinjiang. The announcement was rather surprising because so far
periodic violent clashes in Xinjiang have been between locals and
security forces and civilians were never targeted, it was also not
very logical that terrorists would strike in politically
insignificant Yunnan, more than 1,600 kilometers from Xinjiang.
Though
some China analysts are raising a question mark about participation
of Uighurs in Kunming attack because it is so far away, it must be
noted that it is entirely possible. I am more inclined to call it
China's, 26/11, comparing it with the carnage carried out by Pakistan
based terrorist outfit in Mumbai in 2008. In this attack also,
hundreds of innocent people were killed and terrorists had came all
the way from Karachi, a place at least 900 Km away. Unfortunately,
total lack of transparency in China, makes it rather difficult to
comment and be sure about the real facts.
One
thing that surely has come in as an aftereffect of this
incident, is the widening of the rift between Han Chinese of Yunnan
and Uighur, who would now always be watched with suspicion there,
leading to their further isolation from mainstream politics. There
is a fear that if the Chinese government starts using this threat of
separatists to justify their heavy-handed security and policies in
Xinjiang, such incidents might even recur frequently as a backlash.
4th
March 2014
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