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Chinese clash with rioting Uyghurs, at least 150 dead
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mises



Joined: 05 Nov 2007
Location: retired

PostPosted: Thu Sep 03, 2009 6:40 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Heating up again:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article6819938.ece
Quote:
Ethnic tension flares over syringe attacks in Chinese city of Urumqi

Thousands of angry protesters marched in China�s only Muslim-majority region today to demand government action over a series of hit-and-run syringe attacks blamed on the ethnic Uighur group.

The unrest is certain to unsettle the authorities, coming just weeks after angry Uighurs rampaged through the streets of the city of Urumqi in riots that left 197 dead in the worst violence in China in 50 years.

The Government will be desperate to calm tempers and restore order as the leaders in Beijing are preparing for the Communist Party�s biggest party in a decade to celebrate 60 years of party rule.

One resident of Urumqi said he saw a group of ethnic Han Chinese beating up a man from the Turkic-speaking Muslim Uighur minority, accusing him of being among those suspected of stabbing passers-by with syringes.

A Han Chinese man told The Times: �Thousands of people, maybe tens of thousands gathered in People�s Square today to protest. We don�t believe the Government is doing enough to protect us from these syringe attacks.�

The crowd chanted: �Useless government, useless government� as they milled for hours in the city�s main square.

The boss of the Xinjiang region, Wang Lequan, the Communist Party secretary, made his way to the square and took up a megaphone to appeal to the crowds to disperse quietly. His appearance further inflamed the protesters.

�Wang Lequan resign, Wang Lequan resign,� they shouted. Then another roar erupted. �Wang Lequan is a bastard.� The party secretary swiftly withdrew from the square. The crowd did then begin to thin out.

The party secretary is a hardliner who has governed the region with a grip of iron for 14 years. Many Uighurs, now accounting for less than half the population in a region where they were once in an overwhelming majority, chafe under Chinese rule and a tiny minority even dream of independence from Beijing.

The depth of ethnic tension was underscored by the latest reports of bizarre syringe attacks reported on the streets of Urumqi. Officials say people of all ethnic groups have been hurt and 15 people have been detained for the stabbings. They have given no figure for the number of injured nor a breakdown of their ethnic background.

Several people have been treated in hospital but there have been no reports that anyone has been seriously hurt. The China Daily website said no one had been infected or poisoned by the syringe stabbings.

The Han Chinese resident told The Times: �People are pretty nervous to go out on the streets now. Parents make sure that they accompany their children to and from school to protect them from this kind of attack.�


He said the Government had been too slow to respond. That complaint echoed those that followed the riot that raged through Urumqi on July 5 when angry Uighurs beat, stoned, stabbed and set fire to Han Chinese, killing well over 150 people. Others who died are believed to have been Uighurs killed in revenge attacks or rioters shot by paramilitary armed police.

Hospitals declined to give any details of those injured in the bizarre syringe stabbings. An official at the regional People�s Hospital said: �This is a secret matter. Only the government is authorised to give information.�

However, witnesses said groups of relatives of some of the injured had gathered outside the hospital to wait for news of their loved ones. They were described as extremely agitated.

Zhao Jianzhuang, a Han resident, said he had joined a large crowd of protesters who were being blocked by riot police from marching on central People's Square, less than 1 mile (1.6 km) away.

He said anger was stoked by a perceived delay in trials for those arrested after the July riot, as well as by the recent spate of stabbings. �There are so many security forces deployed here, yet they're incapable of protecting us.�
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Rum Jungle



Joined: 18 Nov 2005
Location: North Asia

PostPosted: Tue Sep 29, 2009 3:15 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I saw the sentencing of 3 Uighurs on CCTV for needle attacks so there could have been such incidents. The blogosphere doubts the numbers and extent of the attacks, though. This lengthy piece thinks it may be a case of mass hysteria similar to one in Tianjin in 2002.

Before Urumqi: the 2002 needle attacks in Tianjin and Beijing
There�s nothing new about the use of hypodermic needles to threaten and rob people. It happens all over the world. What is unusual is for an entire city like Urumqi to be gripped by fear, with hundreds of people claiming to have been stabbed, and rumors swirling about separatists deliberately spreading AIDS.


http://www.blackandwhitecat.org/2009/09/14/before-urumqi-the-2002-needle-attacks-in-tianjin-and-beijing/#more-418
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Rum Jungle



Joined: 18 Nov 2005
Location: North Asia

PostPosted: Tue Sep 29, 2009 3:51 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

On the other hand wrote:
RJ:

Interesting discussion. My semi-educated speculation is that these Chinese laws are implemented and enforced in sort of the same way that the Korean government implements and enforces(for example) the laws on visa requirements post-Christopher Neale, ie. something gets announced, which may or may not be an official law, and the folks on the ground interpret it in any number of ways.


I asked Mrs W who runs the school clinic (admittedly not a medical-legal expert) and she thought my younger colleague's statement on the prohibition of marriage for the mentally disabled/incompetent was wrong.
She knows of mentally-ill people married in her home town (of course that raises the issue of illness post-marriage but even so, did not think that the government directly prohibited marriage if the parties were willing to proceed).
The medical test, according to Mrs W, is to provide information to each partner on the other's medical condition. It could be that the Government is content to leave it to the couples themselves and/or their families to bring pressure to bear to prevent any marriage.
The point is well-taken that non-Government interference/pressure on couples in the relatively prosperous coastal Chinese city where I am may be more relaxed in comparison to what goes on in the rural hinterland.
The two prohibitions on marriage that Mrs W could think of were:-
1) partners too closely related by blood ie Leviticus Rules and
2) prisoners
On 2), though, Mrs W corrected herself when she remembered seeing a recent tv documentary about a woman prisoner getting married!
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