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August 20, 2008
Xinjiang
Plays World Human Rights Stepchild to Rock Star
Tibet
by Peter Navarro. Ph.D.
Author of The Coming China Wars
While
Tibet has played the role of China's "rock star" to
human rights activists around the world, China's
Xinjiang Province has been treated more like an
unwanted stepchild. One reason is that Tibet has a
true rock star in the exiled Dalai Lama. Another
reason is that the strife in Xinjiang involves
Muslim ethnic minorities with alleged ties to the
most hated man in the Western world -- Osama Bin
Laden. All of this, however, is simply unfair
because what is happening in Xinjiang in terms of
human rights violations may be even worse than the
Tibetan repression.
Xinjiang is China's largest province
geographically but, with its extremes of heat and
cold and desert climate, it is also one of its most
sparsely populated. This province was formally
annexed to the Manchu Qing Empire as early as 1759
but, for all practical purposes, it remained under
the control of provincial warlords until the
ascendancy of the Communist Party in 1949. That was
when one of the most interesting, and possibly most
ruthless historical events was ever perpetrated --
one that allowed China to bring Xinjiang under its
iron-fist control.
During the immediate post-World War II period,
Xinjiang was controlled by Stalin and the
Soviet-backed East Turkistan Republic. Reluctant to
support a nationalist Muslim regime on the border
of the then-Soviet Central Asian republics, Stalin
brokered what appeared to be a peaceful
accommodation between the Muslim leaders of East
Turkistan and Mao's government. However, the plane
carrying the East Turkistan leadership to Beijing
to negotiate the peace agreement mysteriously --
and all too conveniently -- crashed and killed all
aboard. In the ensuing leadership vacuum, Mao's
forces stepped in and assumed control of Xinjiang,
an "autonomous province" in name only.
From an agricultural point of view, much of
Xinjiang is a virtual dustbowl in no small part
because of overgrazing, deforestation, overplowing,
and the failed efforts of the central government to
turn grasslands into farmland. However, beneath
Xinjiang's dusty soil and mountainous steppes lies
buried 40% of China's coal reserves. Equally
abundant and far more precious to the central
government are oil and natural gas deposits that
total the equivalent of about 30 billion tons of
oil and represent one fourth to one third of
China's total petroleum reserves.
Xinjiang is not just one of China's best bets
for energy resources. Bordering eight countries in
Central Asia and the Russian Federation, Xinjiang
also has important strategic value. Central Asia
can serve as a transshipment area for Middle East
oil should war ever break out over Taiwan or
China's various imperialist claims for oil reserves
in the South China Seas. Central Asia republics
such as Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstanalso have large
petroleum reserves of their own that can help
lessen China's Middle East oil dependence. For
these reasons, China is building a vast network of
modern infrastructure that includes railways,
roads, and pipelines linking Xinjiang eastward to
China's petroleum-thirsty industrial heartland and
west and north to Central Asia and Russia.
In Xinjiang, the majority of the population
consists of a Muslim Turkic people called the
Uighurs. These Uighurs face some of the harshest
and most repressive measures in the world under the
jackboots of Chinese Communism -- arguably even
more oppressive than what the Tibetans face. Any
independent religious activity can be equated to a
"breach of state security," activists are regularly
arrested and tortured, and despite its sparse
population, Xinjiang's ethnic groups suffer more
executions for state security crimes than any other
province.
Tragically, repression in Xinjiang has only
intensified in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist
attacks on the United States. The Chinese
government seized upon this attack on American soil
as a golden opportunity to cut a very clever deal
with the United States. China would support the
U.S.war on terrorism if the United States would
agree that the separatist activities of the Uighurs
represented not simply an indigenous rebellion
against autocratic rule but rather a legitimate
terrorist threat with ties to Al-Qaeda and Osama
Bin Laden. As part of its deal with America, China
now defines a terrorist in Xinjiang as anyone who
thinks "separatist thoughts," and Xinjiang's jails
are crowded with such pseudo-terrorists.
Although China's iron-fisted repression in
Xinjiang borders on the unbearable, what sticks
most in the Uighur craw is the ongoing
"Hanification" of Xinjiang. As a matter of policy,
for decades the Chinese government has sought to
pacify Xinjiang by importing large portions of its
Han population from other, primarily poor areas --
and even by despicably exporting young Uighur women
of child-bearing age out of the region. Consider
this chilling passage from Reuters:
- China's government is forcibly moving young
women of the ethnic Uighur minority from their
homes in Xinjiang to factories in easternChina,
a Uighur activist told the U.S. Congress on
Wednesday. Rebiya Kadeer, jailed for more than
five years for championing the rights of the
Muslim Uighurs before being sent into exile in
the United States, called for U.S. help in
stopping a program she said had already removed
more than 240,000 people, mostly women, from
Xinjiang. The women face harsh treatment with
12-hour work days and often see wages withheld
for months. . . . Many suspect that the Chinese
government policy is to get them to marry
majority Han Chinese in China's cities while
resettling Han in traditional Uighur lands. . .
.
Today, as a result of these policies, the Han
population is rising at a rate twice as fast as
that of the Uighur population. Rather than being
pacified or tamed by the growing Han population,
the Uighurs are simply becoming more and more
radicalized. There is a very bitter and dangerous
irony in this ethnic strife reported in the
Economist: Whereas the Uighurs historically have
been "among the world's most liberal and
pro-Western Muslims, fundamentalist Islam is
gaining sway among young Uighur men." Today,
"Uighurs report that small-scale clashes break out
nearly every day between Chinese and Uighurs in
Xinjiang's western cities."
It is unlikely that a full-blown guerrilla
movement will emerge in Xinjiang to engage Chinese
forces in an Algerian- or Vietnamese-style revolt.
The populace is simply too small, and Chinese
security forces are too big and powerful. However,
in an age of "suitcase" nuclear bombs and
biological terrorist weapons, China is increasingly
exposed to attacks from Uighur separatists at soft
target points such as the Three Gorges Dam or any
one of its teeming cities. Indeed, as we have seen
in a series of recent attacks, Uighur separatists
are showing an increasing ability to strike at
Chinese targets.
The question ultimately for this conflict -- and
the fate of the Uighur people -- is how this
conflict will be judged by world opinion. Will the
Uighurs be seen for what they are -- a ruthlessly
oppressed people being gradually exterminated
through the policy of Hanification? Or will the
taint of a Bin Laden connection prevent the same
kind of world outrage that we now witness over
Tibet? It is an open question -- and one that the
Chinese government itself could deftly sidestep if
it simply began to treat its autonomous regions as
truly autonomous.
©2008 by Peter Navarro. Published with
permission.
Peter
Navarro, a business professor at the University of
California-Irvine, is the author of the best-
selling investment book If It's Raining in
Brazil, Buy Starbucks and the path-breaking
management book, The Well-Timed Strategy.
Professor Navarro is a widely sought after and
gifted public speaker and a regular CNBC
contributor. Prior to joining CNBC, he appeared
frequently on Bloomberg TV, CNN, and NPR, as well
as on all three major network news shows. He has
testified before Congress and the U.S.-China
Commission and his work has appeared in
publications ranging from Business Week, the
L.A. Times, and New York Times to the
Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, and
Harvard Business Review. Visit Dr. Navarro's
website: www.peternavarro.com.
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