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Military

SLUG: 5-51784 China / Xinjiang Terror
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=06/12/2002

TYPE=BACKGROUNDER

NUMBER=5-51784

TITLE=CHINA XINJIANG TERROR

BYLINE=JIM RANDLE

DATELINE=URUMQI, XINJIANG REGION, CHINA

CONTENT=

VOICED AT:

INTRO: Chinese officials say the capture of a key terrorist leader and hundreds of his supporters has blunted a Muslim separatist threat to its oil-rich Xinjiang (pronounced: shin-jiang) region. Critics accuse China of exaggerating the danger to excuse a broad crackdown on the Muslim Uighur (pronounced: wee-gur) population in the region. V-O-A's Jim Randle has the story.

TEXT:

SFX: COPS MARTIAL ARTS EXERCISES, ESTABLISH AND FADE UNDER)

Several dozen Chinese police clad in blue combat uniforms demonstrate their warrior skills by breaking boards with fists and feet.

Chinese officials say these officers in Xinjiang's capital, Urumqi, are on the front line of the global war on terrorism.

They show visitors gruesome pictures of 1997 bombings and assassinations they blame on Muslim Uighur separatists. Beijing insists that smaller terror attacks continue in Xinjiang.

The Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region is a sparsely populated area of rocky deserts, sand dunes, and grasslands, ringed and crossed by snow-capped mountains. It covers an area bigger than Germany, France, and Spain combined.

/// SFX: PRAYERS FROM MOSQUE, ESTABLISH, FADE ///

It is traditionally home to Muslim Uighurs. They differ ethnically, linguistically and philosophically from the Han Chinese who rule China under the Communist Party.

The Uighurs wrested independence from China for two brief periods during the last century. Beijing has since deployed tens of thousands of troops and police to crush any renewed break-away drive.

Chinese officials say Uighur separatists are terrorists with links to Osama bin Laden's al Qaida terror network across the border in Afghanistan. Mr. bin Laden is blamed for last

September's terror attacks in the United States.

Provincial Communist Party Chief Wang Lequan says about one-thousand Uighurs from Xinjiang learned bomb-making and weapons skills in camps run by Mr. bin Laden. He says they crept back home to cause damage and death.

/// WANG ACT IN CHINESE, ESTABLISH, FADE ///

Mr. Wang says Chinese authorities have captured 110 members of this group. Pakistan recently seized a senior leader and sent him to China for trial.

Chinese officials say Ismail Kadir is a key part of the group of about 10 leaders of the Uighur

independence movement. They say the loss of a talented leader and a sizable percentage of fighters will hurt - but not kill - the group they claim threatens peace in this part of China.

/// OPT ///

Mr. Wang says U-S troops fighting in Afghanistan captured 300 Uighurs in the ranks of Taliban and al Quiada forces. He says it is "a pity" that Washington has not turned them over to China for legal action.

/// WANG ACT IN CHINESE, ESTABLISH AND FADE ///

But he also says China has the situation under control because "the number of terrorists is quite small, so the threat to public order is small."

/// END OPT ///

Human rights groups say China detains thousands of Uighurs and has executed many in its drive to control the province.

Nicholas Becquilin (prono: beck-lin) is a researcher for the group Human Rights in China. He says China's harsh rule may backfire by angering more Uighurs and prompting them to take up arms. He says Beijing is overreacting.

/// BECQUELIN ACT ///

The authorities have been extremely harsh in the crack down because they actually think that everything is a threat to their rule. Even the slightest criticism of government policies can land you in jail or in detention.

/// END ACT ///

Journalists traveling in Xinjiang are closely followed by carloads of police. The police apparently interrogate and perhaps intimidate people interviewed by foreign reporters.

The few Uighurs who speak freely complain their land is being overwhelmed by Han immigrants from the rest of China. The Han are the vast majority in most of China. In Xinjiang, they have grown from a small minority to nearly half of the population in the past 50 years, with more arriving daily.

Uighurs also complain that Beijing's efforts to develop the impoverished province mostly benefit Han newcomers.

The energy industry is one example, as construction begins on a pipeline to carry Xinjiang's natural gas thousands of kilometers to eastern China.

/// SFX: SOUND OF GRINDER WORKING ON PIPELINE ///

One gas industry executive says about 40 percent of his highly paid skilled workers are Communist Party members, but very few are Uighurs.

Beijing needs stability in Xinjiang so that it can extract the province's oil and gas to fuel national economic growth.

Even if the province had no resources, China would hold tightly to it. After losing territory to foreign powers in the 19th century, Beijing has regained almost all the land it held historically and has no intention of ever losing any more.

Analysts say China fears any move toward Xinjiang independence might encourage other reluctant parts of China, such as Tibet, to spin out of Beijing's control. (Signed)

NEB/HK/JR/KPD



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