Terrorism is a big public
hazard in the world today, posing an enormous threat to the
peace, security and order of the international society.
Over a long period of time—especially
since the 1990s—the "East Turkistan" forces
inside and outside Chinese territory have planned and
organized a series of violent incidents in the Xinjiang
Uygur Autonomous Region of China and some other countries,
including explosions, assassinations, arsons, poisonings,
and assaults, with the objective of founding a so-called
state of "East Turkistan." These terrorist
incidents have seriously jeopardized the lives and property
of people of all ethnic groups as well as social stability
in China, and even threatened the security and stability of
related countries and regions.
Then how did
the "East Turkistan" issue come about? What
terrorist activities have the "East Turkistan"
forces engaged in?
I
The term "East Turkistan"
first appeared at the end of the 19th century. Here,
"stan" means "place" or
"region." However, "East Turkistan" is
not merely a geographical concept, but a political concept
first put forward by old colonialists with the aim of
dismembering China.
Originally, the term
"Turks" referred to people of an ancient nomadic
tribe. In the fifth century, the Turks wandered about the
region of the Altay Mountains. From the mid-sixth century to
the mid-eighth century, they appeared frequently on the
grasslands of north China, and conducted exchanges with
people in China’s Central Plains during the Western
Wei (535-557), Sui (581-618) and Tang (618-907) dynasties,
through various channels and at many levels. In 552, the
Turks founded a khanate, which, at the height of its
prosperity, ruled quite a vast area. In the Sui and early
Tang dynasties, the Turks became a major force in north
China. Later, they split into eastern and western branches,
which engaged in constant struggles for dominance of the
khanate. In the mid-eighth century, the eastern and western
khanates of the Turks declined and went out of existence one
after the other, and their descendants gradually merged with
other ethnic groups. After the 11th century, the
"Turks" mentioned in foreign history books
embraced all the ethnic groups who spoke the Turkic
language, which is a branch of the Altay language family. At
the end of the 19th century, some people proposed to unite
all the ethnic groups speaking the Turkic language from the
Strait of Bosporus to the Altay Mountains to form a
political state. In fact, throughout history there has never
been a unified country consisting of all the Turkic-speaking
peoples, despite claims to the contrary.
To
split Xinjiang from China and bring it under their
domination, some of the old colonialists gave Xinjiang the
name "East Turkistan" (correspondingly, they
called the countries in Central Asia "West
Turkistan"), fabricating the fallacy that Xinjiang was
the home of "Eastern Turks."
After
the establishment of a frontier command headquarters
(duhufu) in the Western Region by the Han Dynasty in 60
B.C., Xinjiang became a part of Chinese territory. From that
time on, the central government has never ceased
jurisdiction over Xinjiang. But in the beginning of the 20th
century, a handful of fanatical Xinjiang separatists and
extremist religious elements fabricated the myth of
"East Turkistan" in light of the sophistries and
fallacies created by the old colonialists. They claimed that
"‘East Turkistan’ had been an independent
state since ancient times," and that the ethnic group
in that state had a history of nearly 10,000 years. They
incited all ethnic groups speaking the Turkic language and
believing in Islam to unite to form a state featuring the
"integration of religion and politics." They
denied the historical fact that all China’s ethnic
groups have joined their efforts to create the great
motherland, and called for "opposition to all ethnic
groups other than the Turks," and for the elimination
of "pagans."
Since the formation of
the "East Turkistan" theory, separatists of every
description have conducted activities in the name of
"East Turkistan," in an attempt to set up a
political state called "East Turkistan."
From the early 20th century to the late 1940s,
the "East Turkistan" forces instigated riots on
many occasions with the connivance and support of foreign
forces. In November 1933, Sabit Damolla and others founded
the so-called "East Turkistan Islamic State" in
Kashi—an attempt of the separatists at putting their
separatist theory into practice. But, thanks to the
opposition of the people of all ethnic groups in Xinjiang,
it collapsed within three months.
Since the
peaceful liberation of Xinjiang, the people of all ethnic
groups have united as one, worked hard and built their fine
homeland with joint efforts. Xinjiang’s society is
stable, its economy has kept developing, the local
people’s living standard has rapidly improved, and the
situation as a whole is good. But the "East
Turkistan" forces, not to be reconciled to their
failure and in defiance of the will of the people of all
ethnic groups, have been on the lookout for every
opportunity to conduct splittist and sabotage activities
with the backing of international anti-China forces.
In the 1990s, under the influence of
extremism, separatism and international terrorism, part of
the "East Turkistan" forces inside and outside
Chinese territory turned to splittist and sabotage
activities with terrorist violence as the main means, even
brazenly declaring that terrorist violence is the only way
to achieve their aims. The programs of the "East
Turkistan Islamic Party" and of the "East
Turkistan Opposition Party" seized by the police
clearly point out that they will "take the road of
armed struggle," and "conduct various terrorist
activities in densely populated regions." In the
booklet What Is the Hope for Our Independence compiled by
them, they openly declare that they will create a terrorist
atmosphere at kindergartens, hospitals and schools at any
cost. The "East Turkistan" terrorists have
engineered a series of bloody terrorist incidents, leaving
many blood-soaked chapters in the historical annals.
II
Incomplete
statistics show that from 1990 to 2001, the "East
Turkistan" terrorist forces inside and outside Chinese
territory were responsible for over 200 terrorist incidents
in Xinjiang, resulting in the deaths of 162 people of all
ethnic groups, including grass-roots officials and religious
personnel, and injuries to more than 440 people. The main
terrorist incidents include:
1.
Explosions
Like most terrorist groups in the
world, the "East Turkistan" terrorists are keen on
directing explosions at innocent people, in order to create
an atmosphere of terror and to extend their influence.
On February 28, 1991, an explosion engineered
by the "East Turkistan" terrorist organization at
a video theater of a bus terminal in Kuqa County, Aksu
Prefecture, Xinjiang, caused the death of one person and
injuries to 13 others. On the same day, the terrorists also
planted a bomb at a private store in the county seat, which,
fortunately, did not explode.
On February 5,
1992, while the Chinese people were celebrating the Chinese
New Year, the Spring Festival, the terrorists blew up two
buses (Buses No. 52 and No. 30) in Urumqi, the regional
capital of Xinjiang, killing three people and injuring 23
others. Two other bombs they planted—one at a cinema
and the other in a residential building—were
discovered before they could explode, and defused.
From June 17 to September 5, 1993, the
"East Turkistan" terrorist organization was
responsible for ten explosions at department stores,
markets, hotels and places for cultural activities in the
southern part of Xinjiang, causing two deaths and 36
injuries. Among them, the June 17 explosion at the office
building of an agricultural machinery company in Kashi
demolished the building, killed two people and injured seven
others. The August 1 explosion at the video theater of the
Foreign Trade Company in Shache County, Kashi Prefecture,
injured 15 people, and the August 19 explosion in front of
the Cultural Palace in the city of Hotan injured six people.
On February 25, 1997, directing its terrorist
activities to the capital of Xinjiang again, the "East
Turkistan" terrorist organization blew up three buses
(Buses No. 2, No. 10 and No. 44) in Urumqi. Nine people died
and 68 others were seriously injured in the incidents, among
whom were people of the ethnic Uygur, Hui, Kirgiz and Han
origins.
Between February 22 and March 30,
1998, the "East Turkistan" terrorist organization
set off a succession of six explosions in Yecheng County,
Kashi Prefecture, injuring three people and causing a
natural gas pipeline to explode and start a big fire. The
direct economic losses came to over one million yuan.
Early in the morning of April 7, 1998, the
same terrorist organization engineered eight explosions one
after another at places such as the homes of a director of
the Public Security Bureau of Yecheng County, a
vice-chairman of the Yecheng County Committee of the Chinese
People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) and
a deputy commissioner of Kashi Prefecture. The explosions
injured eight people.
2. Assassinations
To sabotage national unity and create an
atmosphere of terror, the terrorists have targeted their
attacks at officials, ordinary people and patriotic
religious personages of the Uygur ethnic group, as well as
the ethnic Han people, killing them as "pagans."
On August 24, 1993, two "East
Turkistan" terrorists stabbed and seriously injured
Abliz Damolla, an executive committee member of the CPPCC
Yecheng County Committee in Kashi Prefecture and imam of the
Great Mosque there.
On March 22, 1996, two
armed and masked terrorists broke into the home of
Hakimsidiq Haji, vice-chairman of the Islamic Association of
Xinhe County, Aksu Prefecture, and assistant imam of a
mosque, and shot him dead.
Early in the
morning of April 29, 1996, a dozen armed-to-the-teeth
terrorists broke into the homes of Qavul Toqa, a member of
the CPPCC National Committee and deputy to the Xinjiang
Uygur Autonomous Region People’s Congress at Qunas
Village of Alaqagha Township in Kuqa County, and three local
Uygur grassroots officials, creating bloody terrorist
incidents by means of explosion, shooting and stabbing. The
terrorists threw two bombs into Qavul Toqa’s home,
seriously injuring him and his wife. Avul Toqa, Qavul
Toqa’s younger brother, was stabbed to death with
seven wounds, and his wife was first stabbed then shot to
death. Anvar Qavul, Qavul Toqa’s son, died of nine
stab wounds and a shot to the head, and his wife died of
eight stab wounds and two shots to the head. Javup
Muhammatman, a village official, received serious stab
wounds.
The "East Turkistan"
terrorist organization plotted the assassination of Arunhan
Aji, executive committee member of the Islamic Association
of China, vice-chairman of the CPPCC Xinjiang Regional
Committee and chairman of the Kashi Islamic Association, on
May 12, 1996. Early on the morning of that day, Arunhan Aji
and his son were on their way to the Aitga Mosque to worship
when four terrorists attacked them. Both of them were
seriously injured, Arunhan Aji with 21 stab wounds and his
son with 13 stab wounds.
Early in the morning
of March 23, 1997, a gang of terrorists, led by Tursun
Turdi, gatecrashed into the home of Omarjan, manager of the
Jinyinchuan Reclamation Area of Aksu Prefecture, killing him
and his wife. Early in the morning of July 3 of the same
year, the same gang stormed into the home of Turdi Niyaz, a
village official of Bashereq Township in Avat County,
killing him and his wife.
Early in the morning
of November 6, 1997, a terrorist group headed by Muhammat
Tursun, at the order of the "East Turkistan"
organization abroad, shot and killed Yunus Sidiq Damolla, a
member of the Islamic Association of China and of the
Islamic Association of Xinjiang, chairman of the Islamic
Association of Aksu and imam of the Mosque of Baicheng
County, while he was on his way to the mosque to worship. On
January 27, 1998, the same terrorists shot and killed Abliz
Haji, executive committee member of the CPPCC Yecheng County
Committee and imam of the county’s Great Mosque, while
he was on his way to the mosque to worship.
On
June 4, 1997, four terrorists broke into the home of
Muhammat Rozi Muhammat, an official of Huangdi Village of
Aqik Township in Moyu County, Hotan Prefecture, and killed
him with 11 stab wounds.
On August 23, 1999, a
dozen of terrorists led by Yasin Muhammat broke into the
home of Hudaberdi Tohti, political instructor of the police
station of Bosikem Township in Zepu County, Kashi
Prefecture, killing Hudaberdi Tohti with 38 stab wounds and
his son with a shot to the head. Then the terrorists set
Tohti’s home on fire, causing serious burns to his
wife.
On February 3, 2001, a gang of
terrorists broke into the home of Muhammatjan Yaqup, an
official at the People’s Court of Shufu County, Kashi
Prefecture, killing him with 38 stab wounds.
3. Attacks on Police and Government
Institutions
On August 27, 1996, six
terrorists in combat fatigues drove to the office building
of the Jangilas Township People’s Government, Yecheng
County, where they cut the telephone lines and killed a
deputy head of the township and a policeman on duty.
Afterwards, they kidnapped three security men and one
waterworks tender in a village of the same township, and
later killed them in the desert 10 kilometers away.
Early in the morning of October 24, 1999,
terrorists attacked the police station in Saili Township,
Zepu County, with guns, machetes, incendiary bottles and
grenades. They shot one member of a local security guard
dead and wounded another, wounded a policeman and killed a
criminal suspect in custody. After that, they burned ten
rooms, one jeep and three motorbikes belonging to the police
station.
4. Crimes of Poison and Arson
From January 30 to February 18, 1998, members
of the "East Turkistan Liberation Organization"
were responsible for 23 poisoning cases in Kashi City. One
innocent person died as a result, and four others suffered
serious effects. In addition, thousands of domestic animals
died or suffered badly.
On May 23, 1998,
members of the "East Turkistan Liberation
Organization" who had sneaked into Xinjiang after
receiving special training abroad, committed 15 cases of
arson with some 40 chemical comburents in the busiest areas
of Urumqi, such as the Huadu Plaza, Daximen, the Hetan Road
Clothing Materials Wholesale Market, the Changzheng Hotel
Wholesale Market, the Hongshan Timber Market, the Urumqi
Hotel, and the Business and Trade Center. They threatened to
"make Urumqi a sea of fire and cause losses of hundreds
of millions of yuan." Thanks to prompt action by the
authorities, no serious damage was caused.
On
October 11, 1999, three terrorists put three ignition
devices in cotton heaps at the cotton purchasing station of
the Hotan City Cotton and Hemp Company. One of them
exploded, causing the loss of two tons of cotton. The other
two devices were removed in time.
5.
Establishing Secret Training Bases and Raising Money to Buy
and Manufacture Arms and Ammunition
In order
to train hardcore members and enlarge their organization,
the "East Turkistan" terrorist forces secretly
established training bases in Xinjiang, mainly in remote
parts of the region. In 1990, the "Shock Brigade of the
Islamic Reformist Party" established a base to train
terrorists in the remote Basheriq Township, Yecheng County.
Three training classes were run there, with more than 60
terrorists having been trained, mainly in the theory of
religious extremism and terrorism, explosion, assassination
and other terrorist skills, and physical strength. Most of
the trainees later participated in the major terrorist
activities, such as explosions, assassinations and
robberies, from 1991 to 1993 in various parts of Xinjiang.
In February 1998, Hasan Mahsum, ringleader of
the "East Turkistan Islamic Movement" abroad, sent
scores of terrorists into China. They established about a
dozen training bases in Xinjiang and inland regions and
trained more than 150 terrorists in 15 training classes. In
addition, they set up large numbers of training stations in
scattered areas, each of them composed of three to five
members, and some of them being also workshops for making
weapons, ammunition and explosive devices. The Xinjiang
police uncovered many of these underground training stations
and workshops, and confiscated large numbers of antitank
grenades, hand-grenades, detonators, guns and ammunition.
On December 30, 1999, the police discovered an
underground hideout in Poskam Township, Zepu County. In this
hideout, which was 3 meters from the ground and measured 3
meters long, 2 meters wide and 1.7 meters high, they found
tools for making explosive devices, such as electric drills
and electric welding machines, as well as blueprints and
antitank grenades.
On February 25, 2000, the police
arrested seven terrorists in the No. 3 Village, Kachung
Township, Shache County, and discovered a tunnel leading to
an underground bunker beneath the house of one of them,
which was equipped with ventilation devices and water supply
and sewage systems. The tunnel was 7 meters long and 2.5
meters high and the bunker was 12 meters long, 3.8 meters
wide and 2 meters high. The police seized 38 antitank
grenades, 22 electric detonators, 18 explosive devices, 17
kilograms of explosive charges and more than 20 fuses from
the bunker.
In August 2001, police discovered
a four-meter-deep tunnel under the house of a terrorist in
Seriqsoghet Village, Uzun Township, Kuqa County, and
confiscated 61 explosive devices from the tunnel, which also
contained various kinds of equipment for making arms and
ammunition.
6. Plotting and Organizing
Disturbances and Riots, and Creating an Atmosphere of Terror
In order to create an atmosphere of tension
and fear, and extend its political influence, the "East
Turkistan" terrorist forces plotted and organized riots
and disturbances many times, by engaging in terrorist acts
of beating, smashing, looting, arson and murder, which
seriously endangered social stability, people’s lives
and property.
On April 5, 1990, a group of
terrorists, aided and abetted by the "East Turkistan
Islamic Party," created a grave terrorist incident in
Barin Township, Akto County, Xinjiang. They brazenly
preached a "holy war," the "elimination of
pagans" and the setting up of an "East Turkistan
Republic." The terrorists tried to put pressure on the
government by taking ten persons hostage, demolished two
cars at a traffic junction and killed six policemen. They
shot at the besieged government functionaries with
submachine guns and pistols, and threw explosives and
hand-grenades at them.
From February 5 to 8,
1997, the "East Turkistan Islamic Party of Allah"
and some other terrorist organizations perpetrated the
Yining Incident, a serious riot during which the terrorists
shouted slogans calling for the establishment of an
"Islamic Kingdom." They attacked innocent people,
destroyed stores and burned and otherwise damaged cars and
buses. During this incident seven innocent people were
killed, more than 200 people were injured, more than 30
vehicles were damaged and two private houses were burned
down. The terrorists attacked a young couple on their way
home, knifing the wife to death after disfiguring her and
severely injuring the husband. A staff member of a township
cultural station was stabbed to death and then thrown into a
fire.
Besides engaging in terrorist violence
within China’s borders, the "East Turkistan"
terrorist forces have also been involved in violent
incidents beyond the borders.
In March 1997,
"East Turkistan" terrorists opened fire at the
Chinese embassy in Turkey, and attacked the Chinese
consulate-general in Istanbul, burning the Chinese national
flag flying there.
On March 5, 1998, they
launched a bomb attack against the Chinese consulate-general
in Istanbul.
In March 2000, Nighmet Bosakof,
president of the Kyrgyzstan "Uygur Youth
Alliance," was shot dead in front of his house by
members of a terrorist organization named the "East
Turkistan Liberation Organization" because he had
refused to cooperate with them.
In May 2000,
members of the "Uygur Liberation Organization"
beyond the boundaries extorted US$100,000 as ransom after
kidnapping a Xinjiang businessman, murdered his nephew, and
set the Bishkek Market of Chinese Commodities on fire. On
May 25, 2000, terrorists attacked the work team of the
Xinjiang People’s Government which went to Kyrgyzstan
to deal with the above case, causing one death and two
injuries. The culprits then fled to Kazakhstan, killing two
Kazakhstan policemen who were searching for them in Alma-Ata
in September the same year.
The ironclad
details of these bloody facts are irrefutable proof of the
nature of the "East Turkistan" forces as a
terrorist organization that does not flinch from taking
violent measures to kill the innocent and harm society so as
to achieve the goal of splitting the motherland.
III
There is plenty of evidence
to show that most of the terrorist and other violent
incidents which have occurred in Xinjiang were directly
plotted and engineered by the "East Turkistan"
organization beyond China’s borders, with the
collusion of a handful of people within the borders.
The 15 cases of arson caused by chemical
comburents in Urumqi, the regional capital of Xinjiang, in
May 1998 were plotted and carried out by members of the
"East Turkistan Liberation Organization" from
beyond China’s borders who had slipped into Xinjiang.
In February 1998, dozens of members of the
"East Turkistan Islamic Movement" who had received
special training in Afghanistan sneaked into Xinjiang and
inland provinces and cities, and established 15 secret cells
to offer technical training in explosives to 150 terrorists
from various regions. They purchased a large amount of
chemical raw materials to secretly produce explosives and
other devices, according to the formula supplied by the
terrorist organization beyond China’s borders. In
September 1998, in one search operation alone the Xinjiang
police seized more than 300 trunks of over 20 varieties of
chemical raw materials, totaling six tons, for producing
explosives in the warehouse of the Urumqi North Railway
Station.
In 1998, a gang led by Hogaxim Qasim
from Hotan County and Muhammatjan Huxir from Bole City, both
in Xinjiang, went to Afghanistan to join the "Islamic
Holy Warriors," an "East Turkistan" terrorist
organization, and received special training in shooting,
demolition and assassination. In December the same year,
they were secretly sent back to Xinjiang to establish
organizations, recruit members, raise funds, collect arms
and ammunition, and organize terrorist and other violent
activities.
Organized and plotted by
terrorists dispatched by the "East Turkistan Islamic
Movement" outside China in 1999, terrorists in Hotan
established an underground organization, which set up dozens
of secret cells in seven counties and cities of the Hotan
area for terrorist training and production of explosives and
other arms and ammunition. The antitank grenades seized from
them by the police alone totaled over 4,500, along with 98
guns of various types and tools for producing guns and
explosives.
The "East Turkistan"
terrorists also smuggled arms into China with the collusion
of people both within and beyond the country’s borders
to arm fellow terrorists in China. On April 6, 1998, the
Chinese customs and frontier checkpost at the Qorghas land
port discovered six pistols, one folding submachinegun, over
19,000 bullets and more than 90 antitank grenades in a sheep
wool container. The culprits confessed that they had acted
under the orders of the "East Turkistan International
Committee" and the "East Turkistan Liberation
Organization" outside China, and had smuggled arms and
ammunition into China 17 times.
The "East
Turkistan" terrorists are closely connected with
international terrorist forces.
The "East
Turkistan" terrorist organization based in South Asia
has the unstinting support of Osama bin Laden, and is an
important part of his terrorist forces. The "East
Turkistan Islamic Movement" headed by Hasan Mahsum is
supported and directed by bin Laden. Since the formation of
the "East Turkistan Islamic Movement," bin Laden
has schemed with the heads of the Central and West Asian
terrorist organizations many times to help the "East
Turkistan" terrorist forces in Xinjiang launch a
"holy war," with the aim of setting up a
theocratic "Islam state" in Xinjiang.
The terrorist forces led by bin Laden have
given much financial and material aid to the "East
Turkistan" terrorists. In early 1999, bin Laden met
with the ringleader of the "East Turkistan Islamic
Movement," asking him to "coordinate every move
with the ‘Uzbekistan Islamic Liberation
Movement’ and the Taliban," while promising
financial aid. In February 2001, the bin Laden terrorists
and Taliban leaders met at Kandahar to discuss the training
of "East Turkistan" terrorists. They decided to
allocate a fabulous sum of money for training the "East
Turkistan" terrorists and promised to bear the funds
for their operations in 2001. Moreover, the bin Laden
terrorists, the Taliban and the "Uzbekistan Islamic
Liberation Movement" have offered a great deal of arms
and ammunition, means of transportation and
telecommunication equipment to the "East
Turkistan" terrorists.
Bin Laden’s
group has also directly trained personnel for the "East
Turkistan" forces. Hasan Mahsum chose some criminals,
religious extremists and national separatists both from home
and abroad for training at bin Laden’s terrorists
training camps in Afghanistan, at Kandahar, Mazari Sharif,
and other places. After the training, some of the key
"East Turkistan" members were secretly sent back
to China to set up terrorist organizations, and planned and
carried out terrorist activities; some joined the Taliban
armed forces in Afghanistan, some joined the Chechen
terrorists in Russia and some took part in terrorist
activities in Central Asia. In August 1999, "East
Turkistan" terrorists bore a part in kidnapping four
Japanese scientists and senior local officers of the
Kyrgyzstan Ministry of Internal Affairs in south Kyrgyzstan,
and held them hostage, and in August 2000, they took part in
the invasion of Uzbekistan and the mountain area of south
Kyrgyzstan, attacking local government forces of the two
countries.
Most of the explosions,
assassinations and other terrorist incidents that have taken
place in Xinjiang in recent years are related to these
organizations. So far, the Chinese police have arrested over
100 terrorists who had sneaked into Xinjiang after being
trained in terrorist training bases in Afghanistan and other
countries. The police of some other nations have also
extradited or transferred to China a dozen or so "East
Turkistan" terrorists they captured.
As
the appeal for international cooperation in curbing
terrorism is becoming increasingly stronger following the
"September 11" terrorist attacks in the United
States, the "East Turkistan" forces that bear
evident marks of terrorism have found themselves in an
extremely embarrassing situation. While they are distressed
by the destruction of the bin Laden terrorist forces and
Taliban terrorist training bases by US missiles, they cannot
but "take the initiative" to express their support
for the US military retaliation, attempting to distance
themselves from the bin Laden terrorist forces. To erase
their terrorist marks and conceal their label as a terrorist
organization, they have demanded that their members not
publish radical remarks for the time being, in order to
avoid being linked with terrorist organizations by the
countries in which they are located. The terrorist
organizations in South Asia lost no time in conducting a
secret strategic shift, evacuating their members in
Afghanistan to the surrounding South and Central Asian and
Middle East regions to preserve and accumulate their
strength. Meanwhile, the "East Turkistan"
terrorist forces have employed the tactic of mounting
attacks as a means of defense. Once again, under the banner
of protecting "human rights," "religious
freedom" and "the interests of ethnic
minorities," they claim that the Chinese government
"has taken the opportunity to crack down on ethnic
minorities," in an attempt to mislead the public and
deceive international opinion, and thus dodge the
international crackdown on terrorism.
IV
To achieve their aim of splitting China, in
recent years the handful of the "East Turkistan"
terrorists within and outside the territory of China have
carried out a series of sabotage activities by means of
terrorism and violence. It is only natural that this has
been firmly opposed by people of all ethnic groups in China,
including the Uygur people in Xinjiang. In order to protect
the lives and property and common interests of the people of
various ethnic groups, maintain the stability of
China’s Xinjiang and the surrounding regions,
safeguard national unity, social stability and the smooth
progress of the modernization drive, the Chinese government
has resolutely cracked down on the violent activities of the
"East Turkistan" terrorist forces in accordance
with the law. However, the Chinese government targets only a
few core members and criminals who have schemed, directed
and participated in violent terrorist incidents. Toward the
majority of the people involved, who have been hoodwinked
into bearing a part in some of the activities of the
"East Turkistan" terrorist organization, the
Chinese government adopts the attitude of educating and
helping them, and welcomes them back to the true path. The
ethnic groups in Xinjiang have always had the glorious
tradition of loving and safeguarding national unity, and
Islam is a peace-loving religion. The Chinese
government’s crackdown on the "East
Turkistan" terrorist forces is not directed at any
particular ethnic group or any particular religion, but at
criminal activities of violence and terrorism, in order to
better protect the common interests of the country’s
various ethnic groups and safeguard normal religious
activities. All the people in the country, including the
people of all ethnic groups in Xinjiang, have given
wholehearted support to the Chinese government’s
policies. Over the past few years, the situation in Xinjiang
has been stable, and the people’s peaceful living and
working environments have been effectively safeguarded. The
people there have been living and working in peace and
contentment.
After the September 11 incident,
terrorist activities have become discredited worldwide and
the "East Turkistan" terrorists in Xinjiang have
gone underground temporarily. The situation in Xinjiang is
stable, and the people there live and work as usual. The
Chinese government has not taken advantage of any
opportunity to institute "suppression," nor does
it deem it necessary to do so. It is obvious that the
“East Turkistan” terrorist organizations are
brazenly peddling rumors out of ulterior motives.
China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region
exercises regional ethnic autonomy, and carries out the
policies of ethnic equality and freedom of religion. It
fully respects and protects the various rights of ethnic
minorities and the citizen’s freedom of religious
belief. With the wholehearted support of the people all over
the country and the common endeavors of the people of all
ethnic groups in Xinjiang, the various undertakings in
Xinjiang have advanced by leaps and bounds. The people of
different ethnic groups, the various religions, and
religious believers and non-believers respect each other and
treat each other equally, co-exist in peace and harmony, and
pursue common development. The region presents a scene of
prosperity. Although there are still a handful of "East
Turkistan" terrorists both at home and abroad, it is
impossible for them to fundamentally affect Xinjiang’s
excellent situation, in which the society is stable, the
people of all ethnic groups are united, the various
undertakings are making progress and people’s lives
are constantly improving.
The Chinese
government opposes terrorism in any form; at the same time
it opposes the application of double standards concerning
the anti-terrorism issue. Any tolerance or indulgence toward
the “East Turkistan” terrorist forces will not
harm China and the Chinese people alone. Today, as the
international community becomes more clearly and deeply
aware of the harm brought about by terrorism, we hope that
all peace-loving people throughout the world, regardless of
ethnic status or religious belief, region or country,
political or social system, will fully recognize the nature
of the "East Turkistan" terrorist forces and the
serious harm caused by them, see through all their
disguises, and jointly crack down on their terrorist
activities, leaving not a single opportunity for them to
exploit to their advantage.
(Source:
Information Office of State Council)