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Monthly Archives: July 2009

World Coalition Condemns China’s Death Threats

In the wake of communist China’s death-penalty threats against demonstrators in East Turkestan, the World Coalition Against the Death Penalty  http://www.worldcoalition.org/modules/accueil/  has called upon the communist regime to respect its international committments and guarantee fair legal process. In a statement, see English and Chinese version here pr_xinjiang_21072009_en-cn[1] (July 21)  the organisation noted that it was:

“Seriously alarmed by the threat of death sentences made by Chinese officials in Urumqi following recent unrest” in East Turkestan, adding China’s death-penalty threats “not only indicates the lack of rule of law in China but is also detrimental to the alleviation of tension between Han Chinese and Uyghur”.

 
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Posted by on July 23, 2009 in News Item

 

China’s Violent Occupation To Blame

As it reacted to the 2008 Uprisings in Tibet, so the communist Chinese regime is engaging in a massive PR campaign to to convince the world that its policies are not to blame for the resentment and unrest in East Turkestan. Wu Shimin, vice-minister of the State Ethnic Affairs Commission, said Tuesday July 22 that government policies “had nothing to do with the violent crimes [sic]” in Urumchi.  Given the extent and nature of suffering forced upon the Uyghur people as a direct consequences of communist Chinese policies such a denial is on a scale similar to the Nazi SS denying responsibility for the genocide visited upon Europe’s Jewish population.

Beijing is cynically masking a widespread  desire for independence from Communist rule, felt by Tibetans and Uyghurs, by presenting  recent unrest and dissent as being associated with locally engineered economic policies.

“The current policies include guiding principles set by the central government and regulations of local governments, but a deeper understanding is needed when it comes to making policies at the local level.” (Vice-Minister Wu Shimin July 22)

This imperialistic thinking, where the occupying power pacifies a restless native population through marginal economic improvements, if applied, can only provide a cosmetic gloss over more profound and historic aspirations for independence.  The communist regime knows this of course, thus its current strategy of portraying political protests in East Turkestan as being unrelated to centrally engineered policy is little more than a self-serving political deception, designed for the uncritical consumption of international opinion.

Though improved economic opportunity, educational resources and health care provison would no doubt be welcomed by Uyghurs and Tibetans, such progress does not address their hopes for political and territoral freedom. Nor do such developments remove the degree of suppression and cultural erosion imposed upon East Turkestan and Tibet. Indeed it could be argued that such advancement is another facet of communist Chinese dominance. Moreover, it must be noted that in China itself (as opposed to the occupied nations of Tibet and East Turkestan) economic prosperity has not witnessed a proportional or associated improvement in terms of human, civil or political rights. Communist China remains a totalitarian state and no amount of commercial expansion and economic glamour can conceal its shameful record of human rights atrocities, and ongoing oppression of the Tibetan and Uyghur peoples.

 
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Posted by on July 23, 2009 in Miscellaneous

 

Business Returns As Uyghurs Suffer

Urumchi Branch Of The Chicken Empire

Urumchi Branch Of The Chicken Empire

Image:chenlun

With the blood of countless innocent Uyghurs still being scrubbed from the streets of Urumchi and hundreds more arrested and facing unimaginable abuse at the merciless hands of communist China’s gestapo-like interrogators, what an opportune time for free-market enterprise, in the form of US multi-national, Kentucky Fried Chicken and French retailer Carrefour,  to return to the heart of the East Tukestan capital! 

France's Retailer in Urumchi

France's Retailer in Urumchi

Image:picasa

Following the announcement of the re-opening of  Urumchi’s Grand Bazzar China’s multitude of colonizers and its foreign visitors will, from 23 July,  be able to enjoy the dubious delights of those  companies, and no doubt cast an indifferent eye to the continuing suppression of Uyghurs.

 
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Posted by on July 22, 2009 in News Item

 

What China is Not Telling the Media

Statement by Ms. Rebiya Kadeer, Uyghur democracy leader at the National Press Club on July 20, 2009

Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen.

Before we begin, I would like to thank the National Press Club for the organization of this event, especially Mr. Peter Hickman. I would also like to thank you for your attendance here today.

Since the unrest in Urumchi on July 5, 2009, the official Chinese media, led by Xinhua news agency and Chinese Central Television, has vigorously presented to the world the Chinese government’s version of events and the cause of the discontent shown by Uyghurs in the streets of East Turkestan’s regional capital. Today’s press conference is to shed light on that reporting.

The version of the Urumchi unrest that has been presented to the world by the Chinese government follows this narrative. On July 5, Uyghur plotters took to the streets and in a display of “beating, smashing, looting, and burning” killed 197 people and injured 1,721. The riot was masterminded by Rebiya Kadeer and the World Uyghur Congress. Yesterday, Nur Bekri, the Chairman of what the Chinese government calls the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, admitted that Chinese security forces used live ammunition and shot dead protesters, who were referred to as “mobsters” in the official media, to control the unrest.

This version of events, as is so often the case with Chinese reporting, is not true. For instance, we know that far more than 12 Uyghurs were shot by Chinese authorities.

The Chinese government, through its proxies in the official media, is obscuring the truth in order to conceal a mass killing of Uyghurs by Chinese security forces. Furthermore, through its demonization of Uyghur protestors in the official media, it is attempting to justify the impending mass executions of Uyghurs as promised by Chinese officials.

The actual events in Urumchi according to eyewitness reports are as follows.

In the days leading up to July 5, an unknown person or persons posted on the forums of China-based websites an appeal to Uyghurs in Urumchi to peacefully protest the Chinese government’s mishandling of multiple killings of Uyghurs by Han Chinese at a toy factory in Shaoguan, Guangdong province. The forum post surprisingly remained online, which is contrary to the known behavior of Chinese government censors.

On July 5, Uyghurs, mostly young men and women, some of whom carried the flag of the People’s Republic of China, assembled and marched peacefully in Urumchi toward People’s Square. They asked for justice for the victims in Shaoguan and expressed sympathy with the families of those killed and injured. They also demanded to meet with government officials but none came out to meet with them.

As the protest was public knowledge, the protesters were met en route by a show of force, including four kinds of Chinese police- regular police; anti-riot police; special police and People’s Armed Police. The police surrounded the protesters and tensions between police and protesters grew. According to an eyewitness caller to our offices, the protesters were incited by plainclothes agents to respond to the police presence. As tensions became heated, police started beating, kicking, and arresting protesters. Then, under the cover of darkness, Chinese security forces began to fire upon Uyghur protesters.

Protesters fled to other points of the city, where they were forced into several closed areas from which they could not escape. The protesters were indiscriminately shot and killed in these locations, and those remaining were arrested. Reports indicate that Chinese authorities turned off the street lighting in the areas where protesters were present. These reports also describe the possible killing of Han Chinese bystanders in the shootings by Chinese police, which may explain the high numbers of Han Chinese fatalities. That Han Chinese civilians may have been killed by Chinese police must be investigated by independent journalists.

In another phone call to our offices, a protestor at Xinjiang University reported that Uyghurs were being fired upon by Chinese police “right now”, and in the background we could hear the screams of people in the vicinity. The caller stated that they could see approximately 50 Uyghurs lying dead from Chinese police shooting in an area around the stop for the number 1 city bus.

On July 11, Reuters quoted a Uyghur resident of Urumchi who said that the official death toll is “the Han people’s number. We have our own number…Maybe many, many more Uighurs died. The police were scared and lost control.” In that same report, Reuters also stated that “a spray of bullet holes could be seen on the glass front of a Bank of China office…Many Uighur residents say they heard or saw gunfire.” That Chinese security forces used live ammunition in suppressing the protest was confirmed in several calls to our office received on Sunday night from protest participants.

Some Uyghurs reacted to the intimidation of Chinese policing. Uyghurs killed and injured Han Chinese in violent attacks. Here, I would like to say that I strongly condemn the violence which took place in Urumchi.

In the immediate aftermath of the violence, Chinese security forces conducted mass-arrests of Uyghurs, according to sources quoted by Radio Free Asia in a July 9 report. A caller to our offices stated that the dormitories at Xinjiang University were broken into by Chinese police in a bid to arrest Uyghurs deemed to have been involved in the unrest. In a Xinhua report dated July 7, Urumchi Communist Party secretary, Li Zhi, was quoted as saying that authorities had detained 1,434 people for their role in the Urumchi unrest. The World Uyghur Congress contests that number, as it has not been independently verified. A July 19 Financial Times report states that more than 4,000 Uyghurs have been arrested and that Urumchi’s prisons are so full that detainees are being held in People’s Liberation Army warehouses. We fear that these detainees face execution in non-transparent judicial procedures.

In further communications with our offices, Uyghurs reported that some of the Uyghur wounded from July 5 did not go to the hospital for fear of arrest. Those who did go to the hospital reported that they were either turned away or charged for treatment, while Han Chinese victims received assistance free of charge.

On July 6-7, 3,000 to 4,000 armed Han Chinese took to the streets attacking and killing Uyghurs. Radio Free Asia reports an eyewitness as seeing 150 to 200 dead Uyghurs in the Hualin district. There have been no reported arrests of Han Chinese from these two days of violence against the Uyghur community in Urumchi. Radio Free Asia reported a Uyghur man as saying that “[w]hen the Chinese came out with batons and clubs, there is no one to stop them. They are pretending to stop them, but they are not really strict… If the Uyghurs had come out with batons and clubs, they would immediately be fired upon.”

In a further act of heavy handed policing, on July 13 reports detailed the fatal shooting by Chinese armed police of two unarmed Uyghurs.

The Chinese government’s crackdown on ordinary Uyghurs in East Turkestan is in full swing. The July 19 Financial Times report states that Chinese armed police have established checkpoints on all roads in and out of Urumchi and that “[p]rivate cars without Uighur passengers were waved through after a quick document check for the drivers. Vehicles with Uighur drivers or with Uighur passengers were being searched at gunpoint.” The report added that numbers of armed police in the region would be raised to 130,000 by October 1, 2009, the sixtieth anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China.

The Chinese government has been vocal about the fact that it allowed the western media into Urumchi to confirm its version of events in order to create a veneer of legitimacy. This is most certainly a change of policy from the ban it imposed on foreign journalists during the March 2008 unrest in Lhasa. However, scratching below the surface, a careful media management strategy is evident. Through this strategy the Chinese government is attempting to conceal the events surrounding the Urumchi unrest, as it is the events surrounding the Shaoguan killings, which precipitated the Urumchi protests. Nevertheless details of those two events have filtered through Chinese censors to present a picture far different than that reported by the official media.

The official Chinese media reports that two Uyghurs were killed during the Han Chinese mob attack at the toy factory in Shaoguan on June 26.

This is not true.

In the U.K. Guardian newspaper, Jonathan Watts reports an interview with a Han Chinese man involved in the Shaoguan killings, who states that he personally “helped to kill seven or eight Uighurs, battering them until they stopped screaming.” The eyewitness added that the death toll could be around 30, a figure which tallies with reports we have received from workers at the toy factory who have been brave enough to call us.

In a Far Eastern Economic Review piece titled ‘Fear Grips Shaoguan’s Uighurs’ , Kathleen E. McLaughlin reports that 700 Uyghurs from the Shaoguan toy factory are now being detained at an abandoned factory ten miles away. The official Chinese media is not reporting this because, as eyewitness accounts testify, the version of events at Shaoguan it has given the world is false. The unlawful detention of these workers illustrates that if the real details of the Shaoguan killings emerge, they will reveal the unwillingness of the Chinese authorities to protect Uyghur citizens from Han Chinese mob violence.

The permission given to western journalists to report from East Turkestan is not all that it seems. Not only was the western media carefully guided through its stay in Urumchi, but reporters also faced detention if they ventured out themselves. Reporters from Radio Free Asia, Associated Press, Agence France-Presse, and TV Tokyo were expelled or detained in the region because the authorities felt that they could not manage them sufficiently. Journalists who have reported a version of events which has strayed from the official path have received death threats from Han Chinese nationalists.

In the wake of the unrest, internet and wireless communications went down in Urumchi, and in the region. This was for a very good reason – to prevent an Iranian style spread of news from citizen journalists.

The Chinese authorities’ deep fear that that a different version of events will emerge from the one reported in the official media has spread to a threat issued to the legal community. According to the Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC), the Beijing Municipal Judicial Bureau “issued a notice on its Web site on July 8 calling on justice bureaus, the municipal lawyers association, and law offices in Beijing to ‘exercise caution’ in representing cases related to events” in East Turkestan.

The Chinese reporting on the Urumchi unrest has also not given any prominence to the involvement of key government officials in exacerbating disharmony between Han Chinese and Uyghurs.

Urumchi Communist Party secretary, Li Zhi, at a press conference[xxv] on July 8, stated that executions would be used to deal with protestors. The well-documented lack of transparency in the Chinese judicial system, especially for Uyghurs, coupled with the state-sanctioned threats towards lawyers who may represent protestors, illustrates that these executions, when they do take place, are political.

However, Xinhua did find it reasonable to report Li Zhi’s inflammatory chanting of “Down with Rebiya”, at the scene of the unrest, further fanning the flames of Han Chinese nationalism and dividing Uyghurs and Han Chinese. Indeed, official comments have taken on an even more hyperbolic nature, as the China Daily charges that the Urumchi unrest can be linked to Al-Qaeda.

Since the Urumchi unrest, the Chinese government has made a number of high profile attacks on freedom of speech in western countries to suffocate Uyghurs in exile.

On July 8, I published an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal. I commend the Wall Street Journal’s decision to publish the piece due to the disgraceful nature of some of the remarks left on its comments section by Han Chinese nationalist “netizens”. The remarks not only attacked the newspaper, calling for a boycott of the publication, but also a number of distressing personal comments were made about myself. Xinhua, in a July 13 report, went so far as to congratulate those people who had left these abusive ultra-nationalist comments.

Rightfully so, if free speech is to be respected, the Wall Street Journal published a letter from Wang Baodong, the spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, D.C., on July 15. However, Mr. Wang used his opportunity to chastise the western media for its exercise of freedom of speech by stating that “[t]he Chinese government and people are very much displeased with the Journal’s decision to publish Rebiya Kadeer’s…op-ed”.

The attack on freedom of speech in the western media was also taken to Australia. The cultural attaché at the Chinese consulate in Melbourne, Chen Chunmei, urged organizers of the Melbourne International Film Festival to withdraw a film about my advocacy work. The festival organizers dismissed the pressure.

Naturally, what is missing from the Chinese official media’s reporting of the Urumchi unrest is the larger picture of repression of Uyghurs in China. This repression includes the forced transfer of young Uyghur women to Chinese sweatshops; the demolition of Uyghur cultural heritage in Kashgar; a monolingual language-planning policy; discriminatoryhiring practices; torture and execution on political charges; and curbs on freedom of religion.

The six decades-long repression of Uyghurs by the Chinese government is the true cause of the unrest in Urumchi.

At this point in the East Turkestan issue, I seek an independent and international investigation into the Shaoguan killings and into the Urumchi unrest. Let the world understand the real events. The streets of cities in East Turkestan are littered with closed-circuit television. The tapes from cameras on the streets of Urumchi during the unrest should be made freely available to western journalists. If the truth were to emerge, this would surely contribute to a path of dialogue between Han Chinese and Uyghur based on equality and trust.

I also urge the Chinese government to allow journalists access to East Turkestan and Uyghurs without any conditions. It is well-known that Uyghurs who speak to western journalists often disappear. No one knows the whereabouts of Dilkex Tiliwaldi, a Uyghur who disappeared after speaking to a PBS journalist several years ago.

This access to East Turkestan will be critical in the coming days as looming executions of Uyghurs on political charges come ever nearer (see CECC’s Authorities Pledge Crackdown Following Xinjiang Demonstration and Clashes.) We fear that a number of Uyghurs are going to be executed unnoticed by the world. In order to prevent such state-sanctioned killing we require the eyes of the world’s media and the world’s governments to remain on East Turkestan and to speak out against a further abuse of the Uyghur people’s human rights.

My last appeal is to western journalists. Please consider carefully the information you receive from the official Chinese media. I understand that the Chinese government’s management of information makes it difficult for you to produce work under tight deadlines, but please consider the source of the information, the Chinese government, and the political motives that drive its output of news.

Thank you.

 
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Posted by on July 22, 2009 in News Item

 

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China Runs Away-Melbourne Film Festival

In a petulant reaction communist China has July 22 withdrawn three films from the Melbourne International Film Festival in retaliation for the organiser’s inclusion of a documentary on prominent Uyghur-exile Rebiya Kadeer. More details here:

http://www.theage.com.au/national/china-pulls-films-out-of-festival-20090721-ds2a.html

 
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Posted by on July 21, 2009 in News Item

 

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Evidence of External Terrorism In East Turkestan

Traditional Dress A Terrorist Offence?

Traditional Dress A Terrorist Offence?

Communist China now claims it possesses evidence that the demonstration in Urumchi on July 5, was co-ordinated by so-called extremist Islamist forces. According to officials, quoted in China’s state-controlled press July 20,  surveillance videos supposedly showed women, in what were described as ‘long Islamic robes and head coverings’  and  issuing orders to rioters. One woman was claimed to have been distributing clubs. Beijing’s official mouth-piece the China Daily claimed Chinese security police considered that: “Such dressing is very rare in Urumqi, but these kind of women [sic] were seen many times at different locations on surveillance cameras on that day,”.  What such propaganda fails to report is that the streets of Urumchi were swamped by thousands of paramilitary Chinese stormtroopers , admittedly not wearing life-threatening Islamic costumes, but jack-boots, body-armor and carrying submachine guns  http://world.guns.ru/smg/smg75-e.htm  capable of firing 500 rounds per minute!

China's Terrorists Faced Uyghur Women in Robes!

China's Terrorists Faced Uyghur Women in Robes!

Image:xinhua

These fact-free reports seek to exploit the paranoia and prejudice which associates any cultural manifestation of Islam as being inherently threatening or extreme.  There is only one adjective which best describes a state that criminalises, insults, persecutes and marginalises a people on the basis of their appearance, beliefs or physical appearance, facist.

External Terrorist Forces Attack Uyghur Woman

External Terrorist Forces Attack Uyghur Woman

Image:telegraph

There are indeed external forces of extremism operating inside East Turkestan, they are not however wearing traditional Uyghur dress or religious costumes, but the blood-stained uniforms of communist China’s paramilitary.

Shoot To Kill

Shoot To Kill

Image:xinhua

 
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Posted by on July 21, 2009 in News Item

 

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Uyghur’s Rally In Almaty

Several thousand exiled Uyghurs  http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/topic,463af2212,463af2332,3ae6ad6140,0.html  gathered in the capital of Kazakhstan on Sunday July 19  to protest the communist Chinese crackdown of their countrymen in East Turkestan. Uyghurs, including women wearing white scarves, a symbol of mourning, expressed their anger, after a minutes silence in respect of those killed by Chinese paramilitary troops, chanting  “freedom for Turkestan”.

Mr. Khodzaberdiev, invited by the Uyghur World Conference,  informed reporters that they want an investigation led by the United Nations, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch. ” We want to know the truth. .. China is lying, but I always pessimistic. ” He said, adding that Western countries would probably call for such an investigation for fear of impairing its relations with important trading partner of China. “Maybe China will not allow for one (to hold such an investigation), but we have to do all that is possible. May be just a cry of despair.”

 
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Posted by on July 20, 2009 in Demonstrations

 

BBC’s Shameful Collaboration

Communist China To Screen BBC Whitewash of Tibet

Communist China To Screen BBC Whitewash of Tibet

Image:xinhua

Not since Leni Riefenstahl lovingly fashioned her propaganda celebrations of Nazi-Germany  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triumph_of_the_Will or the film board of apartheid South Africa encouraged documentaries of the supposedly content black populations of the townships,  have we witnessed such a shameful betrayal of the facts, in which the violent suppression of a people’s legitimate rights are callously ignored in order to appease an authoritarian regime. Yet, the BBC Four documentary ‘A Year in Tibet’ surely merits inclusion in the academy of infamy.

It has troubling echoes of a film made long ago about the Apartheid Regime in South Africa. The Prime Minister, (of then named Rhodesia) Ian Smith, had just declared independence from Britain, in order to safeguard white rule. But even so much unease existed in that country about the appalling government so close to its borders. Accordingly the South Africans ‘invited’ a ‘Rhodesian’ film crew in, to give a “fair and balanced picture of South Africa”. The crew were accorded free access and did indeed spend much time filming, documenting and researching. The result was most agreeable to the two countries. While ’blacks’  were being beaten and tortured and existing in rotting townships, black people were shown happily going about their everyday business, laughing, chatting and living in comfortable conditions. However, even this massacre of the facts did not feature black people’s homes with pictures of Doctor Verwoerd (then South African Prime Minister) on their walls. Viewers of ‘A Year in Tibet’  were no doubt gratified to note images of Mao Tse Tung in Tibetan homes, a similar film might have shown Jewish houses with pictures of Hitler adorning their walls after the Holocaust.

The BBC claimed that its film was an  ‘observational documentary’, following a year in the life of Gyantse, Tibet’s third largest town, portraying a seemingly contented and thriving culture, untainted by the odious excesses of Communist Chinese occupation. Unfortunately the systematic erosion of Tibetan culture was not embraced by the film, whose makers somehow managed to document daily-living in such circumstances, yet singularly failed to feature the cultural and political suppression, which has operated inside Tibet since China’s invasion in 1950. Choosing to gloss-over the facts, through what appeared to be highly-staged propaganda, which carefully avoided  issues of sensitivity by constructing a stereotypical and idyllic image of life inside Tibet. In cynically excluding important factual information, the film misrepresents the oppressive realities experienced by Tibetans.

blogimagetwo

Although featuring an exotic and colourful, albeit limited, glimpse of Tibet, it lacks any critical material. For example, Gyaltsen Norbu, an innocent stooge selected by Communist China as Tibet’s new ‘Panchen Lama’ was given considerable exposure, whilst the candidate formally recognised by the Dalai Lama, was virtually absent, with no reference to the fact that he remains in ‘protective custody’ at an unknown location. This resulted in a selective and biased presentation, of an issue of immense cultural importance to the people of Tibet, and one which would have attracted the interest and concern of  viewers world-wide.

This, and other distortions, was orchestrated in part by the film’s locational Director, Ms Shun Shuyun, an individual who seems to have some affinity with the Communist Chinese authorities, raising the question if it was ever possible to realise even the mildest criticism or balanced assessment. It may well be that Ms Shuyun is a card-carrying member of the Chinese Communist Party, whatever the facts, it is difficult to understand why she was chosen for such a critical post, where independent objectivity would be vital.  Imagine producing a similar project on the lives of Palestinians, and appointing a non Arab-speaking, orthodox and right-wing Israeli as Director. Under such a circumstance could one ever expect a film that would meaningfully examine, challenge or question some of Israel’s less honourable actions? Furthermore, in promoting a warped image of life in Gyantse, which included no reference to the notorious Gyantse Detention centre (from which has emerged a number of reports documenting systematic torture and abuse of Tibetans), the film is affirming a deceit of equal stature to the assertion that ‘Hitler did not gas Gypsies or Jews’.

suncrap

In producing this obsequious propaganda, we can observe a dishonourable policy operating within the BBC, one that avoids areas of particular concern or embarrassment to China, and given the totalitarian nature of China’s government, which approved this film, it is extremely difficult not to view this project as anything but a politically motivated sanitisation. The issue of  Tibet has suffered from years of Chinese propaganda  distorting and obscuring the tragic condition of the Tibetan people, ‘A Year in Tibet’  has done nothing to redress this imbalance, indeed it has endorsed the official Chinese viewpoint by failing to present a balanced and factual perspective.

sevencrap

As demonstrated by the announcement    http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-07/19/content_11731595.htm that this propaganda-piece is to be screened across China, this film has greatly pleased the communist government of China (and the British Foreign Office whose policy of appeasing China at all costs, callously ignores the political aspirations of Tibetans for independence and human rights abuses, such as the brutal realities of forced sterilisation of Tibetan women).

Sign The Petitition: http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/bbc-whitewashes-tibet/signatures.html

 
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Posted by on July 19, 2009 in Appeasing China, News Item

 

Uyghur’s Paris Protest

OTROCADERO_P1

Image:francoismori/ap

France’s exile-Uyghur community, along with supporters, took to the streets of Paris July 18 to protest against the violent suppression of their culture by communist China, and the recent killings of Uyghurs by Chinese paramilitary troops during a peaceful demonstration in Urumchi on July 5.

Displaying the forbidden flag of East Tukestan, a criminal act under communist Chinese occupation, protesters carried banners that read “Stop killing Uyghurs” and “Uyghurs want justice”, along with images of the Uyghur dissident leader in exile, Rebiya Kadeer. The President of the Uyghur Association in France informed journalists:

“The international community must intervene to put pressure on China and stop the Chinese authorities’ policy of repression. This is not new. Since 1949, China has undertaken a policy of genocide against Uighurs. This massacre has to stop.”

 
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Posted by on July 19, 2009 in Demonstrations

 

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Witness To Urumchi Atrocity

An article in the New York Times (July 18) includes the testimony of an American teacher who witnessed the violent suppression of the peaceful demonstration by Uyghurs in Urumchi, East Turkestan on July 5. Mr. Adam Grode recalled that:

“..people also began gathering on the northern edge of the old Uighur quarter, said Adam Grode, an American teacher who watched the scene from his 16th-floor apartment. The crowd swelled to more than 1,000 people, including women and the elderly. By 6:30 p.m., a line of troops from the People’s Armed Police, a paramilitary force, had formed to the north and was trying to push the crowd down into the Uighur quarter. Some officers charged with batons. The crowd surged back against the troops, fists raised.

Another wave of troops arrived. They were better equipped, with body padding and riot shields, Mr. Grode said. Some had rifles slung across their bodies.

Young men began hurling stones and bricks as the police attacked with batons. People also threw rocks at buses that had been halted. A full-fledged street battle erupted, though the police officers at this point did not use their guns, Mr. Grode said. After 8 p.m., rioters showed up in mixed neighborhoods about two miles southeast of the Uighur quarter. Police officers did not arrive until after 1 a.m., witnesses said. These areas were among the worst hit; witnesses said bodies were strewn all around Dawan North Road, for instance.

Earlier, at twilight, back in the northern half of the Uighur quarter, officers sprinted through alleyways to beat down and handcuff Uighur men. By around 10 p.m., they had begun opening fire with guns and tear gas rifles, Mr. Grode said, adding that he heard occasional series of single-shot gunfire. Another foreigner also said she heard gunfire after dark.”  (Emphasis Added)

Extracts from: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/18/world/asia/18xinjiang.html?_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rss

 
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Posted by on July 18, 2009 in News Item

 

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