June 14, 2006
China: Uyghur Separatists Caught Up In Antiterror Campaign
by Breffni O'Rourke
Uyghur men walking past a statue of Mao Zedong in Kashgar (file photo) (AFP)
PRAGUE, June 14, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- The summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) on June 15 seems likely to tighten the net around the efforts of China's Muslim Uyghur community to achieve independence from Beijing.
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Aleksandr Alekseyev has said SCO members will sign an agreement aimed at stopping cross-border movement of people "implicated in terrorist, separatist, and extremist activities."
He said that the SCO summit plans also to create a joint database of separatist, extremist, and terror organizations -- a list that is bound to include Uyghur pro-independence groups.
The independence movement seeks to reestablish the Turkic Uyghur entity called "East Turkestan" in China's Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. East Turkestan was essentially made part of China in the 19th century, and officially so by communist authorities in 1955.
Placating China
Uyghur activists are blamed for a series of bombings and other violence in Xinjiang. The SCO moves appear designed to make it harder for separatists to find shelter in neighboring Central Asian states, some of which have Uyghur communities of their own.
The Uyghur American Association spokesman in Washington, Ben Carrdus, says the Central Asian states are not keen to antagonize China by being seen to play host to Uyghur radicals.
"Placating the People's Republic of China to a large extent is quite a concern of the Central Asian republics, and they do have to keep one eye on the purse strings," Carrdus says.
Another analyst, Christian Le Miere of Jane's security journal "Country Risk," says Central Asia is indeed attentive to China's massive economic expansion.
"China is particularly concerned [to ensure] that there is stability on its western borders, and that there may be oil and gas reserves within Central Asia that it can utilize for its fast-growing economy," Le Miere says.
"And the Central Asian countries recognize, for their part, that China is a growing market and will begin to rival Russia in the next few decades for [dominance] of the sphere of influence in Central Asia," the analyst adds.
Repression, Harassment Of China's UyghursAs the political developments unfold at the Shanghai summit, there are reports of continuing Chinese action against Uyghurs. The Uyghur American Association says Tudahun Hoshun has been held since March on allegations of trying to "split the state."
The association says Hoshun was hung from a ceiling, beaten, and starved for three days because he did not memorize the jail regulations in Chinese -- a language he reportedly does not speak.
Uyghur women washing clothes in China's Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (epa file photo)
In another case, Chinese police were reported to have detained the three adult children of the president of the Uyghur American Association, Rabiya Kadir. Officials were quoted as saying they owe millions of dollars in taxes, but the move is being interpreted as a way of ensuring that the Kadir family did not speak with a U.S. congressional delegation that visited Xinjiang.