Posted on 12/22/2003 3:38:28 PM PST by RWR8189
China is stepping up its efforts to convince the outside world that there is a direct link between the US-led war on terror and its own fight against Muslim separatists.
But many remain unconvinced by Beijing's latest claims against those accused of carrying out a series of bombings and assassinations in its biggest and most politically restive region.
In the past, China revealed as little as possible about the sensitive issue of separatist violence in the huge and remote western region of Xinjiang.
Apart from anything else, it was highly embarrassed by the claims of local Muslim Uighurs that they were being oppressed and overwhelmed by outsiders in their own land.
"Beijing was initially very shy about the whole problem," said MJ Gohel, a terrorism specialist at the Asia Pacific Foundation, an independent intelligence think tank based in London.
Separatists were labelled as mentally ill and the whole problem was simply covered up, he said.
But now he believes China has "come out of the closet" as far as Xinjiang and terrorism are concerned.
The Uighurs, who look and sound more like Turks than Han Chinese, enjoyed a brief period of independence in the 1940s, calling themselves the Republic of East Turkestan.
CHINA'S UIGHURS
Ethnically Turkic Muslims
Made bid for independent state in 1940s
Sporadic violence in Xinjiang since 1991
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But the communists re-established control soon after coming to power and the Han Chinese population has since increased from less than 10% to almost 50% of the total.
China has waged a continuing battle against signs of rebellion against its rule, though human rights groups say many of those it has arrested may have done "little more than practice their religion or defend their culture".
Since the 11 September 2001 attacks on the United States, China has not only intensified its crackdown in Xinjiang, but it has also felt bold enough to seek outside help.
It now describes its once secret and sensitive private problem as an integral part of the war on global terrorism.
It has already named more than 10 groups it accuses of being behind terrorist attacks aimed at creating an independent Islamic state.
Now it has picked out four groups and 11 individuals it says are threatening not only China's security but also that of other countries in the region.
China says they are all based abroad and therefore it needs international help in dealing with them.
They include the Eastern Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), which the US and the UN agreed to ban last year after being heavily lobbied on the issue by China.
As well as ETIM, the groups named on China's first ever "terrorist" list are the Eastern Turkestan Liberation Organization (ETLO), the World Uighur Youth Congress (WUYC) and the East Turkestan Information Centre (ETIC).
There is credibility to the claims that both these groups - ETIM and ETLO - have close links with terrorist groups in the region
MJ Gohel, Asia Pacific Foundation
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The last two groups, both based in Germany, have been operating openly and legally for years, and there seems little prospect of the German Government acting to close them down as China wishes.
Although they both support the creation of a independent state for Xinjiang's Muslims, there is no sign of any evidence linking either of these groups to terrorism, said Michael Dillon, a specialist on Xinjiang at the University of Durham.
Like many others, he is not convinced that the other two groups on the list even exist.
"There are militant organisations, it is true, involved in some of these attacks inside Xinjiang, but whether they have links abroad or really are these two that are being named is open to doubt," Mr Dillon said.
The US may have decided to back Beijing's original call for action against ETIM partly as a way of repaying China's support for its wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, according to some observers. At the same time, they say, Washington seems to have agreed to overlook Chinese human rights abuses in Xinjiang.
Bin Laden link
But some terrorism specialists say there are grounds for believing that Washington and Beijing have tangible evidence linking ETIM to the Taleban in neighbouring Afghanistan and Osama Bin Laden's al-Qaeda network.
"The Chinese do have a valid argument in this case," said MJ Gohel of the Asia Pacific Foundation.
In recent years a large number of Uighurs have crossed the border from Xinjiang into Pakistan, Afghanistan and Central Asia and have come into contact with al-Qaeda and other groups, he said.
"Some have become radicalised and received training and arms before slipping back across the Chinese border.
"There is credibility to the claims that both these groups - ETIM and ETLO - have close links with terrorist groups in the region".
The failure of Pakistan to stop them is one reason for the recent cooling of ties between Beijing and Islamabad, Mr Gohel added.
Beijing is currently pressing Washington to repatriate several Uighur prisoners who have been held at Guantanamo Bay since being detained by US forces in Afghanistan.
The Chinese might be a pack of communist murderers, but they know who their enemies are and how to deal with them. A bullet to the back of the head, usually.
http://www.rediff.com/news/1999/feb/12tali.htm
"Taliban-China deal puzzles diplomats," by Tara Shankar Sahay in New Delhi
The diplomatic community in South Asia is puzzled by a military co-operation agreement signed between the Taliban militia in Afghanistan and the People's Republic of China.
Diplomatic sources said the agreement was signed on December 10 and that the agreement was not signed between the two governments but between the Taliban military commanders and representatives of China's People's Liberation Army.
According to the agreement, the PLA has agreed to:
i) Repair and maintain equipment captured by the Taliban militia from adversaries.
ii) The PLA would assist in raising and training the Taliban armed forces. Initial, 25,000 troops are to be trained.
iii) The PLA would provide training facilities for the Taliban's air force pilots.
iv) The PLA would provide from its own funds about 10 million US dollars to improve infrastructure for the Taliban armed forces.
v) Initial training and maintenance of equipment are to done at Taxila in Pakistan.
In return, the Taliban has given an undertaking that it will not provide any training to Chinese Muslims in China's Xinjiang province and that it will assist the Chinese authorities maintain places of worship and madrasas as in China.
Diplomatic sources indicated that the agreement has been brokered by Pakistan to provide the Taliban with some sorely-needed legitimacy. The Chinese authorities have yielded to pressure from Islamabad since Beijing has found it difficult to control the unrest among the Uiigur Muslims in Xinjiang. They said if the Chinese deal with the Taliban works, Beijing would be able to get matters settled without "actually dirtying its hands".
Senior Indian diplomats pointed out that the agreement provides an outlet for the Taliban to launder its drug money through Chinese banks. The Taliban has indicated it's positive about this opening the Chinese has given it and the militia is currently willing to meet any demands from Beijing.
There are indications that the Taliban militia may open an office in Beijing to meet the requirements of Chinese personnel who wish to visit Kandahar, Kabul and other important places in Afghanistan. [end article]
Unedited video of the 9/11 attacks sure was popular in China as I recall news stories at the time.
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