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China: Rioters Behind Killings In Urumqi Will Be Executed

WILLIAM FOREMAN   07/ 8/09 10:21 PM ET   AP

China Riots

URUMQI, China — Thousands of Chinese troops flooded into this city Wednesday to separate feuding ethnic groups after three days of communal violence left 156 people dead, and a senior Communist Party official vowed to execute those guilty of murder in the rioting in western China.

Long convoys of armored cars and green troop trucks with riot police rumbled through Urumqi, a city of 2.3 million people. Other security forces carrying automatic rifles with bayonets formed cordons to defend Muslim neighborhoods from marauding groups of vigilantes with sticks.

Military helicopters buzzed over Xinjiang's regional capital, dropping pamphlets urging people to stay in their homes and stop fighting. Special police from other provinces were called in to patrol the city.

The crisis was so severe that President Hu Jintao cut short a trip to Italy, where he was to participate in a Group of Eight summit. It was an embarrassing move for a leader who wants to show that China has a harmonious society as it prepares to celebrate the 60th anniversary of Communist rule.

The heightened security came amid the worst spasm of ethnic violence in decades in Xinjiang _ a sprawling, oil-rich territory that borders Pakistan, Afghanistan and other Central Asian countries. The region is home to the Uighur ethnic minority, who rioted Sunday and attacked the Han Chinese _ the nation's biggest ethnic group _ after holding a protest that was ended by police.

Officials have said 156 people were killed as the Turkic-speaking Uighurs ran amok in the city, beating and stabbing the Han Chinese. The Uighurs allege that trigger-happy security forces gunned down many of the protesters, and officials have yet to give an ethnic breakdown of those killed.

In Rome, a Germany-based Uighur leader, Erkin Alptekin, told The Associated Press that "our countrymen in China" reported that 600-800 Uighurs were killed in the past few days and 3,000 were arrested.

"We were told (by fellow Uighurs) that 140 were dead on the spot" on Sunday and that their bodies were tossed into trucks and taken away by Chinese security forces, said Alptekin, who briefed the human rights commission in the Italian parliament.

"When the Uighurs heard the people were fired upon, parents all came out looking for their sons and daughters," he said, adding that security forces started to "disperse them by force, then started to beat them, tear gas them and shoot them."

His account could not be independently confirmed.

More than 1,100 people were wounded in the violence. Dr. Yuan Hong of Urumqi People's Hospital said most of the people treated at his facility were clubbed, while others had been cut by knives.

Li Zhi, the highest-ranking Communist Party official in Urumqi, told reporters that some of the rioters were university students who were misled and didn't understand what they were doing. They would be treated leniently, he said, as long as they weren't involved in serious acts of violence and vandalism.

But Li added: "To those who committed crimes with cruel means, we will execute them."

He also repeated allegations that the riot was whipped up by U.S.-exiled Uighur activist Rebiya Kadeer and her overseas supporters. "They're afraid to see our economic prosperity. They're afraid to see our ethnic unity and the people living a stable, prosperous life," he said.

Kadeer has denied masterminding the violence, and many Uighurs laughed off the notion that they were puppets of groups abroad.

"Not even a 3-year-old would believe that Rebiya stirred this up. It's ridiculous," said a shopkeeper who only identified himself as Ahmet. Like other Uighurs, he declined to give his full name because he feared the police would detain him.

Ahmet was quick to rattle off a long list of grievances commonly mentioned by Uighurs. He accused the Han Chinese of discrimination and alleged that government policies were forcing them to abandon their culture, language and Islamic faith.

"After all this rioting, I'm still filled with hatred. I'm not afraid of the Han Chinese," Ahmet said.

His neighborhood in southern Urumqi was targeted by mobs of Han Chinese who roamed the capital Tuesday seeking revenge. Ahmet's friends had video shot by mobile phones and cameras that showed the stick-wielding Han men beating Uighurs. He pointed to blood stains on a white concrete apartment wall, where he said a Uighur was severely stabbed.

A Uighur college student who called herself Parizat added, "The men were carrying a Chinese flag. I never thought something like this would happen. We're all Chinese citizens."

The Uighurs accused paramilitary police of allowing the Han Chinese to attack their neighbors. But in the video, the troops appeared to be trying to block or restrain the mobs.

On Wednesday, the government warned residents against carrying weapons on the street, and most people generally complied. But there were groups of Han Chinese who tried to find soft spots in police cordons and rush into Uighur neighborhoods.

One such failed attempt sent a wave of terror and panic through the biggest Uighur neighborhood, Er Dao Qiao.

When someone yelled, "The Han are coming!" children scampered indoors and women ran shrieking through a backstreet market with carts of watermelons, shops selling cold soft drinks and smoky grills with sizzling lamb kebabs.

Within seconds, the men armed themselves with spears stashed behind doors and under market stands. The weapons were long poles with knives and meat cleavers tied to the ends. Piles of rocks were placed across the street for ammunition.

One Uighur graduate student who called himself Memet greeted a foreign reporter in English by saying, "Welcome to the jungle!"

"I think the Uighur people lately are kind of happy. You can see it in their eyes, a bit of happiness. We've spoken up. People know we exist now," he said.

The ethnic hatred in Xinjiang appears to run so deep that many Uighurs won't express sorrow for the Han Chinese who were attacked Sunday.

One of them was Dong Yuanyuan, 24, a newlywed who said she was on a bus with her husband getting ready to leave on their honeymoon. She said Uighur attackers dragged them off the bus and beat them until they were unconscious. Her husband was still missing, said the woman, who had abrasions on her face, arms and knees.

"My aunts have been going to all the hospitals to search for him. He must still be unconscious," she told reporters who joined a government tour at the People's Hospital.

Abdul Rehim, a Uighur with his left arm in a sling, said he was walking with his brother when a group of Han Chinese "just came out and did this to me."

Another victim was Ma Weihong, who said she was walking home from a park with her 10-year-old son when the riot started. The boy suffered minor injuries, but the mother had a broken arm and wrist, missing teeth and head wounds.

"The stores all closed up and we tried to run for home," she said. "That is when they caught us. We couldn't get away."

___

Associated Press writer Frances D'Emilio in Rome contributed to this story.

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URUMQI, China — Thousands of Chinese troops flooded into this city Wednesday to separate feuding ethnic groups after three days of communal violence left 156 people dead, and a senior Communist ...
URUMQI, China — Thousands of Chinese troops flooded into this city Wednesday to separate feuding ethnic groups after three days of communal violence left 156 people dead, and a senior Communist ...
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02:22 PM on 07/09/2009
Lots of parallels with the British in N. Ireland after they moved a bunch of their staunchest Protestants there. One can only hope that the Chinese gov't treats its Uighurs and Hans even handedly and not use this as an excuse for ethnic cleansing.
10:23 AM on 07/09/2009
Brooklyn, N.Y.: Why is the unrest in Xinjiang being portrayed as "rioting" by "angry Uighurs" in U.S. media? When a people are as oppressed as Uighurs in China are, I would think the word to use would be "protesting." Furthermore, there is no confirmation that the violence is predominantly one-sided by Uighur protesters, and not reciprocated or exacerbated or even initiated by Han vigilante groups.

Today's Times article about the violence (which has commenting disabled) states in one paragraph that "angry Uighurs attacked Han civilians," while in the very next sentence admitting, "Government officials declined Tuesday to give an ethnic breakdown of the dead." Earlier in the article, they quoted a horribly unreliable source: "one Han family member who reviewed photos of the dead, seeking to identify a relative, said in an interview that the great majority of the photographs were of Han victims."

Why is the U.S. media siding with the oppressive Chinese government and portraying this struggle for freedom and basic human rights in China as mob violence? What is the U.S. really going to gain by refusing to take a hard stance on these violations and not making good on its word to be a leader in this world?
12:28 PM on 07/09/2009
My thoughts exactly. The fact that they are muslims may very well have a lot to do with it, but the reporting so far has been ridiculously biased in favour of China's nightmarish Orwellian government. I support any group, anywhere which does not want to live under an authoritarian regime led by a conquering ethnicity. More riots. Not less.
08:02 AM on 07/10/2009
"Furthermore, there is no confirmation that the violence is predominantly one-sided by Uighur protesters, and not reciprocated or exacerbated or even initiated by Han vigilante groups."

Actually there are multiple accounts from western media that the violence is mostly committed by the Uighur protesters.

http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/malcolmmoore/100002509/urumqi-riots-signal-dark-days-ahead/

"Earlier in the article, they quoted a horribly unreliable source:"

What makes you think the source is unreliable? You think the source is unreliable because it doesn't fit into your China-bashing agenda.
09:10 PM on 07/08/2009
Good read

Dr. Sean Roberts ( George Washington University) Q&A on Uyghurs from Washingtonpost:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/discussion/2009/07/07/DI2009070701491.html?hpid=topnews
11:25 PM on 07/08/2009
Can you summarize them in couple bullet points? We are twitter generation.
05:26 PM on 07/08/2009
The numbers provided by both the Chinese government and the Chinese Uighurs lack credibility. In any case, the killings of innocent civilians, both the Han Chinese and the Chinese Uighurs, must be condemned. There's no justification for violence and killing.

Here in America we don't have all the facts and we can't rely on the corporate media to report the truth, so we need balanced analysis from independent sources to reach a reasoned conclusion.
06:45 PM on 07/08/2009
Here's a reasonable analysis all to common for all times and ages. A typical brawl escalated into a neighborhood and then city riot along ethnic lines. Authorities made a show of strength, bashed a few heads and carted some to jail. End of story. Until the next time.
You can cut-and paste the same story to Ancient Egypt or Rome.
those who indulge in a or.gy of politically correct speech about dilution and oppression do so to serve their political and/or ethno-religious preoccupations. Whatever they may be.
07:25 PM on 07/08/2009
Pretty much so. But that is too boring for the Internet bystanders. They want to find meaning and self-indulgence in everything.
12:33 PM on 07/09/2009
That's a very incomplete analysis. So much so that it really has no use at all because it begins with the "brawl" itself. When an ethnic group that lives in a territory that is being "settled in" by another ethnic group as part of an open policy of an authoritarian government, I am likely to believe them when they say that the cause of the anger is not simply "ethnic" but also "systemic."
05:06 PM on 07/08/2009
The Ulghars need to develop Nook weapons! We need to help them.
06:39 PM on 07/08/2009
Nook demands from a total schnook. Appropo.
07:59 PM on 07/08/2009
But won't they pass them along to their Mu.slim brothers? You need to sign a contract with them to make sure they won't do so. Guard the contract with an army of lawyers will help too.
09:39 AM on 07/09/2009
Pakistan has nooks. We seem to be ok with Pakistan. So why not the Ulghurs? China helped Pakistan attain Nooks. So China know how this works.
04:39 PM on 07/08/2009
China need to be nooked/
03:34 PM on 07/08/2009
Uighur intol.erance towards economic migrants from other parts of China is desp.icable.
Maybe its time many thousands of Uighur migrants to other provinces are accused of "diluting" local ethnicities.
How would you like that? No? Then keep like a fish.
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munki
Global to Local now Local to Global
04:04 PM on 07/08/2009
When I visited there... they are under special quota once moving to other province...

Like we treat minorities... however, realistically... government's effort may not reflect people...

We have similar issues...
04:27 PM on 07/08/2009
There are no quotas for Uighur in other provinces. There's almost total freedom of movement.
Hundreds of thousands of Uighur migrated to other parts of China as well as former Soviet -stan republics and the West.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
davidwayneosedach
03:31 PM on 07/08/2009
Demonstrations do not last long (or get out of hand) in China.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
munki
Global to Local now Local to Global
04:05 PM on 07/08/2009
Because they do not tolerate it...

Really, size of America... population... 5 times more than us...

did I do the math right? 1.5billion almost...
07:28 PM on 07/08/2009
Munik, If I were the authority, I won't tolerate riots too. When public saftey is in question, sho*t to k*ll.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
munki
Global to Local now Local to Global
03:28 PM on 07/08/2009
We had our problem... it is everywhere... racism, ethnic issues...

Singapore does not tolerate any ethnic conflicts... we all human need to see beyond ethnic and/r color...

COME ON WORLD!!!

Michael Jackson opened eyes for many Americans through music...
I call for FOOD... !!!

Everyone loves food... why not!

I learned to cook almost every ethnic popular food... because...
I love to cook... someday... it all be one... FUSION...
03:35 PM on 07/08/2009
good point.
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munki
Global to Local now Local to Global
04:02 PM on 07/08/2009
Thanks! Peace...
03:16 PM on 07/08/2009
Does every ethnic minority of every region in the world deserve a country? If that were the case we would have literally thousands of countries in Europe. Imagine that, a country for Alsatians, Niceans, Basques, Kurds, etc. Where does this end? Nationhood must be earned. I don't think the Uighurs are rioting because they want a nation for themselves, they are rioting for the same reasons African Americans were rioting in the 1960's: poorer comparable living standards than the dominant majority and unfair treatment from the government and employers. It seems to me that this issue can only be resolved through strong political will and judiciary - something that the Chinese government lacks.
03:36 PM on 07/08/2009
Valid question.
04:34 PM on 07/08/2009
Thats why I am against MusIims demaning a homeland the moment they become 51% of the population.

The Pals can go to Jordon. Their real homeland.
02:11 PM on 07/08/2009
Muslim population is increasing--- it's called diversity and multi-culturalism ( see Europe).
Muslim population is decreasing ---"diluting" and "oppression" (see Xinjiang).

And sad thing is many Western naive people fall for illogical stance with just a few token pictures of police and couple of well chosen PC terms about minorities ( always noble).
05:36 PM on 07/08/2009
Muslims piss me off. If they're not blowing stuff up, they're sitting quietly while other muslims blow stuff up. I don't like to think that all 1.5 billion of them are the same, but I sure don't hear any of the "peaceful" ones speaking out against terrorism.
07:33 PM on 07/08/2009
Mu.slim population will take over Europe within our life time.

I have nothing against Mu.slim but a Is.lamic Europe gets on my nerve. Does it means it will eventually all study Koran and ignore the splendid European cultures? That is what happened in Egypt when Mu.slim took over the region from the Ancient Egyptians.

My statement is digressing from the story. And it is politically incorrect. Just my thought. I find it pretty stupid but scary anyway.
01:48 PM on 07/08/2009
We do not have a framework for discussing migration and ethnicity. Christian absolutism fails. An interesting view is the documentary "kings of the sky", a portrait of Uyghur tightrope walkers as a focus for ethnic identity.
02:15 PM on 07/08/2009
Globalization engineered by United States is the true threat to ethnic identity everywhere around the world. Only by destroying the Unite States government, will people of the world be free.
05:38 PM on 07/08/2009
Freedom is just another word for death.
02:21 PM on 07/08/2009
Strong ethnic identity is an enemy of peaceful coexistence. Always has been. Uighur are Chinese. Irrespective of their religion. Those who automatically view separatist agenda as a somehow noble and benevolent needs to analyze this subject more thoroughly.
And not be swayed by a few token pictures of nefarious police and the brave and heroic protesters.
It reminds me of the Russian Georgian conflict. Majority of coverage ( a lot of it proven fake) featured Russians on tanks ( the only way they travel apparently) versus Georgian grandmas fearfully looking at the sky.
12:16 PM on 07/08/2009
And that's how you deal with terrorists.
12:53 PM on 07/08/2009
Dear "Farfignuggen", you did not place a question mark after your phrase
that led to beleive that you are somehow connected to higher logic or info
we little people do not grasp. To you anyone who screams from someone
else standing on their toes is terrorist, the Hans are robbing the ethnic populace
of their culture and way of life, Hans have no respect for Islam, Christianity, Judaism
or anything concidered different, let's not kid ourselves here, ONLY AN IGNORANT
PERSON WOULD USE THE WORD TERRORIST WHEN THEY DO NOT KNOW
THE SUBJECT AT HAND, I call it as a desease "The Bush Syndrome'
01:58 PM on 07/08/2009
"Hans have no respect for Islam, Christianity, Judaism."

And I respect them for that!!! Chimera of religion must be defeated.
12:11 PM on 07/08/2009
I wish someone would p.ersecute these far Iefty Iiberal arseholes of the world.
12:04 PM on 07/08/2009
When Osama Bin Laden protested against United States' fascist occupation of the middle east by destroying the WTC, Americans condemned Osama Bin Laden but silent about US' occupation of the middl east. But when Ugyurs protested against CHinese government by killing other chinese, Americans are silent about Ugyur violence. Americans are hypocrites and deserve another 9/11.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GeorgeP922
12:18 PM on 07/08/2009
No, we illegaly detained a group of them for over 10 years.

And why would we protest the Uygurs standing up, the Chinese government has oppressed them for decades, keeping them locked into what is another ghetto just like Gaza.
12:59 PM on 07/08/2009
re."the Chinese government... keeping them locked into what is another ghetto just like Gaza."
What breathless lies. But one can always count on some entertainment here.
Back to reality:
Xianjing province is about 1.6 million square kilometers! That's like 3 Californias.
Not a bad ghetto if you can get it. LOL.
Especially in light of view that ANYONE can immigrate into or out of the province.
07:42 PM on 07/08/2009
George, if they were locked up in Xingjiang (which is a huge to begin with) how does the story compentates your statement when the cause of the riot is because two Urgur migratn workers got killed over girls in a brawl in a southern China city?

Dang, theory never matches with reality. That is pretty suc*ky for many of the theorists here.

Every major city in China has Urgur migrant workers and merchants, by the way. Urgurs or any Chinese citizens for that matter, travel and work across the country at will. Update your 1984 book of metaphors.