Xinjiang riot toll hits 156 as unrest spreads
Urumqi: Chinese police have arrested more than 1,400 suspects
in connection with rioting in the capital of Muslim Xinjiang
region which left 156 people dead and more than 800 injured,
state media said on Tuesday.
Calm had settled over Urumqi, the region’s capital, after 20,000
police, troops and firefighters reclaimed the streets from rioters
who burnt and smashed vehicles and shops and clashed with security
forces over Sunday night.
A total of 1,434 people had been detained, the official Xinhua
news agency reported, although local residents told Reuters
that police were making indiscriminate sweeps of Uighur areas.
Despite heightened security, some unrest appeared to be spreading
in the volatile region, where long-standing ethnic tensions
periodically erupt into bloodshed.
Police dispersed around 200 people at the Id Kah mosque in the
Silk Road city of Kashgar on Monday evening, the day after the
Urumqi rioting, Xinhua said.
The report did not say if police used force but said checkpoints
had been set up at crossroads between Kashgar airport and downtown.
Kashgar is in the far west of Xinjiang.
Human Rights Watch’s Asia advocacy director, Sophie Richardson,
called for an independent investigation into the unrest.
“Whoever started the violence, lowering ethnic tensions in the
region requires the government to constructively address Uighur’s
grievances, not exacerbate them,” she said.
Politically sensitive
Along with Tibet, Xinjiang is one of the most politically sensitive
regions in China and in both places the government has sought
to maintain its grip by controlling religious and cultural life
while promising economic growth and prosperity.
But minorities have long complained that Han Chinese reap most
of the benefits from official investment and subsidies, making
locals feel like outsiders.
Almost half of Xinjiang’s 20 million people are Uighurs, while
the population of Urumqi, which lies around 3,300 km (2,000
miles) west of Beijing, is mostly Han Chinese.
Chinese officials have already blamed the unrest on separatist
groups abroad, who it says want to create an independent homeland
for the Muslim Uighur minority.
Exiled Uighur businesswoman and activist Rebiya Kadeer, blamed
by Chinese state media for being behind the violence, denied
having anything to do with it.
“These accusations are completely false,” Kadeer said through
an interpreter in Washington, where she now lives.
In Washington, the White House said it was concerned about the
deaths but it would be premature to speculate on the circumstances.
Muslim Uighur and Han Chinese residents of Urumqi gave accounts
of bloodshed that are likely to deepen the chasm between the
two sides.
Indiscriminate sweeps
Uighur residents, speaking softly in alleyways away from patrolling
police and troops, complained about the growing Han Chinese
presence. Some said many of those arrested were youths caught
up in indiscriminate police sweeps of the rundown concrete apartments
where many Uighurs live.
“They’ve been taking away all the young people, going into our
homes and taking them away,” said Amina, a middle-aged woman
in a Muslim headscarf sitting on the steps of a mosque. She
said her own son had been taken but did not want to give his
name.
Nearly all Uighurs traced the protests on Sunday back to their
own anger over a confrontation in southern China in late June,
when Han Chinese fought Uighurs working in a factory in Shaoguan
after a false allegation that some of them had raped a Han Chinese
woman.
The government said two Uighurs died in that clash, but many
Uighur residents of Urumqi said they were sure that many more
died.
Han Chinese residents said the toll from the riots was likely
to rise.
Chen, a driver, said his wife who shares driving duties with
him had suffered a badly cut eye when a Uighur youth attacked
their car, and now she was afraid to venture far from home.
“Why doesn’t the United States classify them as terrorists?,”
said Chen, who would not give his full name. “What they did
to us is terrorism, isn’t it?”
Riot victims recovering in a Urumqi hospital described groups
of men who targeted Han Chinese.
“They didn’t really talk to you,” said Huan Zhangzhao, with
two broken ribs and a bloodied eye. “When they saw you, when
they saw a Han person coming along, they started to attack.
When a bus came along, they started to attack.”