Immigration Tensions Led to Attack by Uyghurs
February 29, 2012—Violence in China’s northwestern Xinjiang region which left some 20
people dead this week may have been fueled by a mass migration of Han Chinese to a largely
Uyghur county, stoking ethnic tensions amongst the area’s unemployed youth, according to
residents.
Local officials, meanwhile, were striving to keep a lid on rumors swirling after the worst
violence in seven months in the volatile region and have given strict orders to government
employees not to speak to the media.
But a senior official told RFA that he had witnessed the violence which left nearly 20
dead on a busy street in Kargilik (in Chinese, Yecheng) county in Kashgar prefecture on
Tuesday night.
“We saw the people were crying and fleeing and later all the streets in the town were
blocked by police,” said Abdukeyim, chief of the county’s land management department, just
100 meters (330 feet) from a market where the violence occurred.
He said based on a government report on the incident, a group of knife-wielding Uyghurs
went on a stabbing spree on Han Chinese, leading to a police shootout.
“This morning I attended a conference held by the county which all chiefs of county level
departments were present at. Attendees were given a brief report on the incident,”
Abdukeyim said.
“According to the report, nine [Uyghurs] took part in the attack and eight of them were
shot [dead] by police. Ten Han [Chinese] were killed and five were injured.”
The government of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region said in a statement published on
its official website
www.tianshannet.com on Wednesday that a group of Uyghurs stabbed to
death 13 people before police shot seven of the attackers dead.
Second class citizens
Several residents of Kargilik county interviewed by RFA Wednesday said the violence
stemmed from a massive influx of Han Chinese, resulting in fewer economic opportunities
for the Uyghur community and an upsurge in unemployment.
One Uyghur resident, who asked to remain anonymous, said that Uyghurs were fed up with
being treated like second class citizens in their traditional homeland.
“Growing up in a village, I had never even seen a Han Chinese before I was 18 year old.
Now you can see Han Chinese in all corners of Kargilik county,” he said.
“Their population is exploding and they have now occupied almost all of the towns in the
county.”
“The flood of immigrants was a key reason behind the attack.”
Xinjiang has been gripped for years by persistent ethnic tensions between the Muslim
Uyghurs and the rapidly growing Han Chinese migrant population, leading to riots in the
regional capital Urumqi on July 5, 2009 which left 200 dead and 1,700 injured, according
to state media.
Uyghurs, who form a distinct, Turkic-speaking minority in Xinjiang, say they have long
suffered ethnic discrimination, oppressive religious controls, and continued poverty and
joblessness, even as Beijing pursued ambitious programs to develop its vast northwestern
frontier.
Ethnic policies
A Han Chinese doctor from Bo-Ai Hospital in Kaghilik county expressed sympathy for the
region’s Uyghurs, saying that Tuesday’s attack could have been an act of frustration with
the government’s measures against the minority ethnic group.
“I think the sense of dissatisfaction and resistance is a direct result of the government
enforcing a high-pressure policy on Uyghur people,” said the doctor, who says he had good
relations with Uyghur doctors at the hospital.
“I have a very good relationship with my Uyghur colleagues at the hospital. I don’t want
to see this kind thing happen, but I also don’t want to see excessive controls on the
local Uygur people,” he said.
“If the [harsh] policy continues, there will be more of this kind of thing in the future.
In the end, the ordinary citizens will suffer.”
A senior teacher in Kargilik county compared Han immigrants in the area to an invading
army.
“Yes, it’s true that civilians were targeted in the attack, but in the view of the
Uyghurs—myself included—there is no difference between Han civilians and the army,” he
said, citing the July 5, 2009 riots in which he claimed Han Chinese civilians attacked
Uyghur civilians “with support of the armed police.”
More than 1,000 Uyghurs have been jailed and several thousand “disappeared” in the
aftermath of the most deadly episode of ethnic unrest in China’s recent history, according
to Uyghur exile groups.
“Han civilians are taking our bread, taking our jobs, and taking our houses. They are
threatening our survival,” the teacher said.
The teacher also complained that nearly all Han citizens in Xinjiang sided with the
government on all ethnic issues.
“They never ask the government to end religious pressure on the local people, to stop
arrests and executions, or call for equal job opportunities,” the teacher said.
He said Han citizens were likely targeted because the Uyghurs were not well armed enough
to take on the security forces.
“The difference in power of arms between the two sides is incomparable. You can’t do
anything to the armed police with a knife,” he said.
“I think this is the main reason they attacked Han civilians.”
Reported by Shohret Hoshur and Mihray Abdilim for RFA’s Uyghur service. Translated by
Shohret Hoshur and Mihray Abdilim. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.
View this story online at:
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/uyghur/attack-02292012184547.html
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