Radio Free Asia |
Jan 31, 2013 |
Washington DC |
|
|
Alim Seytoff speaks in Washington about China's ethnic policies, Jan. 31, 2013. |
Failed policies in China’s minority regions may represent the biggest challenge facing the incoming administration.
China’s failure to
reshape its policies
towards ethnic
minorities in
Xinjiang, Tibet, and
Inner Mongolia has
created a major
crisis for incoming
President Xi Jinping,
according to rights
groups which called
for radical reforms
by the new Chinese
leadership.
The groups
representing the
three minorities
said current leader
Hu Jintao failed to
address the variety
of problems
afflicting the
regions during his
decade-long
leadership.
The use of force to
repress and crack
down on Uyghurs,
Tibetans, and ethnic
Mongolians seeking
more autonomy in
China has backfired
and has led to
greater unrest,
putting immense
pressure on Xi to
maintain stability,
Alim Seytoff,
president of the
Uyghur American
Association said.
“While China’s rise
on the international
stage is undeniable
today, China’s
domestic
problems—especially
ethnic issues with
Uyghurs, Tibetans,
and Mongols—have
intensified in the
past decade under
the leadership of Hu
Jintao,” he said at
a discussion on
Capitol Hill in
Washington on
Thursday.
Seytoff said the Hu
administration not
only used “brute
force” to suppress
unrest and silence
critics of Beijing’s
hard-line policies
in the three regions
but also incited the
majority Han Chinese
against the ethnic
minorities, dividing
the country further.
“While it seemed the
Hu administration’s
hard-line policies
worked on the
surface in the past
decade, in fact they
backfired
powerfully, as in
the case of Tibetan
unrest in March
2008, Uyghur unrest
in July 2009, and
Mongolian protests
in April 2011,”
Seytoff said.
All of them were put
down quickly using
force by the Chinese
security forces, he
said.
“I personally
believe the past
decade is really a
missed opportunity
for the Chinese
government to
genuinely resolve
conflicts in the
three biggest and
most important
regions of China,”
he said.
This has “presented
a crisis for Xi
Jinping—China’s new
leader,” Seytoff
said.
Dire situation
Bhuchung Tsering,
vice president of
the Washington-based
International
Campaign for Tibet,
said that China’s
policies restricting
religious and
cultural rights of
Tibetans have
created a dire
situation in the
region and were
responsible for
triggering mass
demonstrations in
2008 and the wave of
98 self-immolation
protests since
February 2009.
“China’s attempt to
deal with the
self-immolations in
the way they have so
far—by use of force,
by trying to
threaten people, by
trying to clamp down
in Tibet, by making
life for the people
of Tibet more
miserable—has not
resolved the issue,”
he said.
“Today, while in
Chinese [populated]
areas the Chinese
people have
comparatively more
freedom than in the
past, in Tibetan
areas we see this
increasing
clampdown, and the
entire Tibetan area
is in fact turned
into one big prison.
There is a heavy
security clampdown.”
Tsering charged that
racial
discrimination by
Chinese officials
“could lead to a
possible
deterioration of the
situation in Tibet”
which the new
leadership under Xi
Jinping “has to
fix.”
He said that he was
concerned by reports
that officials in
Beijing were
considering an
attempt at resolving
the problem of
ethnic tension in
China by eliminating
the constitutional
rights of the
country’s
minorities.
“So far [we have not
seen] any policy
changes … For the
moment it seems to
indicate that there
is a division in the
Chinese leadership
about how to deal
with the nationality
issue,” Tsering
said.
“We should continue
to observe … the
situation so that we
can later judge
leadership from
[any] changing of
this policy.”
Repressive
policies
Enghebatu Togochog,
director of the
Southern Mongolian
Human Rights
Information Center (SMHRIC),
said that mass
demonstrations in
2011 by ethnic
Mongolians in Inner
Mongolia were a
direct result of
repressive Chinese
policies in the
region.
The policies had led
herders to lose
their grazing lands,
caused students to
lose the right to
use the Mongolian
language in their
studies, and forced
the minority group
to abandon its
cultural practices,
he said.
The protests
followed the
mishandling by
authorities of the
death of a herder
who was dragged
under a truck while
trying to protect
his pasture land
from the workers of
a Chinese mining
company.
This, Togochog said,
is “typical of the
Chinese Communist
Party’s approach to
Tibetan, Uyghur, and
Mongolian issues.”
The situation
further deteriorated
in July 2011, when
nearly 400 ethnic
Mongol former
students
demonstrated after
authorities reneged
on an agreement to
provide them with
jobs.
In the wake of
protests in Tongliao,
Hohhot, and Chifeng,
Chinese authorities
poured large numbers
of troops into the
region and enforced
a security lock-in
at schools,
universities, and
government
institutions.
Official media said
the unrest had been
prompted by banned
groups outside the
country, including
the SMHRIC.
Togochog said that
rather than listen
to the concerns of
ethnic Mongolians,
the Chinese
authorities are more
concerned with
silencing dissent by
clamping down on the
protests and by
arresting activists
such as Hada, who is
being held under de
facto house arrest
after 15 years in
jail on charges of
“separatism” and
“espionage.”
Another Inner
Mongolia activist
and blogger,
Huuchinhuu Govruud,
has been repeatedly
summoned,
questioned, and
detained for her
activism since 1996.
“Troubles are always
laid on the
doorsteps of foreign
hostile forces, and
the CCP’s own
policies are never
questioned,” said
Togochog.
Future unrest?
Seytoff pointed to
China’s need for
Xinjiang’s vast
deposits of natural
resources to power
its economy as the
motivating factor
for its heavy-handed
tactics in the
region and tendency
to label members of
the predominantly
Muslim Uyghur
minority seeking
greater autonomy as
“terrorists.”
He said that
Beijing’s propaganda
machine had turned
Han Chinese against
the Uyghurs and led
to violent attacks,
setting the stage
for riots in the
Xinjiang capital
Urumqi in July 2009
which left some 200
people dead,
according to
official count.
Subsequent
detentions,
imprisonment and
executions of
Uyghurs believed to
have participated in
the violence, as
well as policies
fueling Han Chinese
immigration while
curtailing Uyghur
cultural traditions
and employment
opportunities, have
left the minority
ethnic group feeling
even more isolated,
Seytoff said.
“I fear that without
a fundamental change
of China’s
repressive policies
in East Turkestan
[Xinjiang] under Xi
Jinping there would
be more Uyghur
unrest in the
future,” he said.
Reported by
Joshua Lipes.