Posted on 11/01/2004 9:12:57 AM PST by Destro
Martial Law Declared as Nearly 150 Die in Clashes in Central China
By JOSEPH KAHN
Published: November 1, 2004
BEIJING, Oct. 31 - Ethnic clashes between majority Han Chinese and Hui Muslims left almost 150 people dead and forced the authorities to declare martial law in a section of Henan Province in central China, journalists and witnesses in the region said Sunday.
The fighting flared Friday and continued into the weekend after a Hui taxi driver's car hit and killed a 6-year-old Han girl, prompting recriminations between different ethnic groups in neighboring villages, the journalists and witnesses said. One individual briefed on the incident by the police said 148 people had been killed, including 18 police officers sent to quell the violence.
The Chinese news media have reported nothing about unrest in Henan. But a news blackout would not be unusual, because propaganda authorities routinely suppress information about ethnic tensions.
Though most Chinese belong to the dominant Han ethnicity, the country has 55 other ethnic groups, including several Muslim minorities and others with ties to Tibet, Southeast Asia, Korea and Mongolia.
Hui Muslims, scattered in several provinces in the central and western parts of the country, are relatively well integrated into Chinese society and not generally considered a threat to stability.
But outbreaks of Hui unrest were not uncommon in the 1980's, and tensions can bubble to the surface after even minor provocations. Many Hui areas remain impoverished despite rapid economic growth in China's urban and coastal regions, and some members of minority groups say the Han-dominated government does little to steer prosperity to them.
The road accident on Friday set off large-scale fighting after relatives, friends and fellow villagers of the girl who was killed, most of them Han, traveled to the mostly Hui village of the taxi driver to demand compensation. The rival villagers failed to settle their dispute, which quickly grew to involve thousands of people in Zhongmou County between the cities of Zhengzhou and Kaifeng, according to two accounts of the incident.
The local police failed to contain the unrest and authorities deployed the paramilitary People's Armed Police to restore order. Martial law was declared over the weekend, people in the area said, adding that the situation had since stabilized.
One person briefed on the clashes said the authorities might have been particularly alarmed after the police stopped a 17-truck convoy carrying Hui men to the area from other counties and provinces as it passed through Qi County, near Zhongmou. Blockades were set up on major roads in the area, and some bus service was halted.
That suggests that word of the violence may have spread through a network of Hui and perhaps other Muslim groups and that mutual support among them is relatively strong. But details were sketchy and difficult to confirm.
A police officer who answered the telephone in the Zhongmou County public security office on Sunday night declined to provide any information on the matter.
China's countryside and second-tier cities are rife with unrest among peasants and workers complaining about corruption, unpaid wages and other issues. Violent protests, once extremely rare, occur frequently.
Last week, rioters set fire to police cars and looted government offices in Wanzhou, in Chongqing municipality in southwest China, after an argument between several people set off a riot involving as many as 10,000 people, residents and Western news agencies reported.
Chris Buckley contributed reporting from Beijing for this article.
Welcome to da party, pal!
MV
Muslims are equal opportunity bigots: they hate everyone.
How is the NYT spinning this as Bush's fault?
Hmmn. Interesting bit of info we rarely hear about.
**sniff, sniff**
I smell a revolution! LOL
We could only hope that the last bastion of communism will fall... but I will not be holding my breath.
That suggests that word of the violence may have spread through a network of Hui and perhaps other Muslim groups and that mutual support among them is relatively strong. But details were sketchy and difficult to confirm.
Wonder how long it will take China to ask for our help with their "war on terrorism"?
Couldn't happen to a nicer bunch - except prehaps the Frenchies.
But then, most of our clothes come from China and if the Muslims take over there, we may all be wearing burnooses and burquas because its the only thing they'll make.
Dead bodies are the fruit of islam.
The crowd was in a frenzy after being addressed by the Rev. AAwal Chop Ting who was a central figure in the racist tinged trial of Taiwan Abraw Lee.
Ironic how the Chinese government cracks down on Christians but tolerates "the religion of peace".
The ChiComs have a serious and growing problem with their Muslim population, particularly in the western part of china. I wonder how long the "leaders" will be able to hold the status quo togehter between the pressures of capitalism, Islam, and Christianity?
I wasn't talking about a muslim revolution in China. Although, having just read about China and Iran's 30 yr oil deal that may be the revolution that occurs. Most unfortunate situation.
My bet is that by 2015 at the latest, there will be a no-s***ter civil war underway in China...and that some a**hole will be the first to use nukes.
At least 20 people have been killed in ethnic clashes between the Muslim Hui minority and the Han majority in central China's Henan province with the area under military blockade, local residents said.
Women police patrol in Zhengzhou
"There are more than 10 Hui Muslims who died and more than 10 Han died," an employee surnamed Wang from the Zhongmou county taxi company told AFP.
He said the violence last week between the two groups was the worst in memory.
"Clashes have happened frequently before but this is the worst," he said. "The two groups used farm tools to fight each other."
Nanren village, near the south bank of the Yellow River in Zhongmou county, was one of the flashpoints of the confrontation, according to the imam with the village mosque.
Hu said at least six people died in Nanren and the unrest had yet to be quelled.
"Two Huis died here and four or five members of the Han nationality," the imam, surnamed Hu, told AFP by telephone.
Police lined the main road into the village Monday and stopped journalists entering. Busloads of armed police in riot gear were driving into the area.
The imam said the clash erupted late last week when Hui truck drivers from Nanren tried to pass through a village mostly inhabited by Han Chinese and a Hui was beaten up over a traffic dispute.
Soon afterwards thousands of Han Chinese surrounded Nanren. A confrontation developed in which several houses were burnt down and a brick factory was destroyed, Hu said.
The fatalities that Hu referred to happened during this clash, which was only quelled when troops from the regular and paramilitary People's Armed Police arrived.
A local resident surnamed Han described another incident in Liangchenggang village 10 kilometres (6.2 miles) east of Nanran, in which 10 people were said to have died.
"I heard that 100 to 200 Muslims arrived from another part of China China and they were stopped at a roadblock," he said.
Hui Chinese Muslims pray during afternoon prayers at Yinchaun Central Mosque AFP/File
"They got off the bus and started fighting with police. Police used tear gas to disperse them but they got through. I heard that 10 people died in that clash."
Han did not know whether police or Muslims died but said he believed the fighting was not over. "I expect there will be more fighting. The Han Chinese will want revenge," he said.
The New York Times reported that almost 150 people were killed but locals played this figure down.
A female officer in the area's main police station said she was one of the only ones left as her colleagues were out trying to control the disturbances.
"Normally there are several hundred police here but they have all gone to the scene," she said. "The People's Armed Police has also gone to the scene."
The Henan Religious Affairs Bureau confirmed there had been fighting. "Officials have been sent there to try and calm down the two sides," an official surnamed Chen told AFP.
"When the clash erupted, the situation was intense."
Local journalists in the region said a news blackout was in force.
"We want to report about it but the central government doesn't want us to," said a journalist with Henan Daily. "They are afraid to trigger conflict among the ethnic groups."
China's Huis are descendants of Arab and Persian traders. Over the centuries they have mixed so thoroughly with the Han Chinese that they are virtually indistinguishable from each other apart from different customs and dress codes. The Huis are generally considered among China's best assimilated minorities, although occasional clashes with other groups are known to have occurred.
In early 2002 ethnic Huis clashed with Tibetans in a rural county of northwestern Qinghai province, leading to a large number of injuries. Several Huis were sentenced to long jail terms.
http://china.news.designerz.com/at-least-20-killed-in-ethnic-clashes-in-central-china-local-residents.html?d20041101
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