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Protests by ethnic Uyugurs erupt in China
Wednesday, April 02, 2008 22:15 [IST]

NEW YORK: Several hundred ethnic Uyugurs have staged protests in China's restive Muslim-dominated Xinjiang region following the custodial death of a prominent Uyugur businessman and philanthropist, media reported here.

Several hundred people were taken into custody after protests were held at two locations in Khotan prefecture in Khotan city on March 23-24 and Qaraqash county on March 23, witnesses were quoted as saying by the US government funded Radio Free Asia (RFA).
      
Sources reported that the demonstrations followed the death in custody of a wealthy Uyugur jade trader and philanthropist, Mutallip Hajim, 38.      
Police returned his body to relatives March 3 after two months in custody, saying he had died in hospital of heart trouble.
      
The unrest comes two weeks after ethnic Tibetans in neighbouring provinces staged protests against China, prompting a deadly crackdown and countless arrests.
     
In both areas, RFA said, the protesters were demanding that authorities scrap a bid to ban head scarves, stop using torture to suppress Uyugur demands for greater autonomy, and release all political prisoners.

In Khotan, it said, the crowd of several hundred protesters comprised mainly women. Hotel employees said police produced lists of alleged protesters, mainly women, and told them to report to police if anyone using tried to register as a guest under any of those names.
     
It quoted sources as saying that there were six casualties but gave no details. However, it said police in Khotan city and its Chinbagh district, contacted by telephone, denied any violence. In Qaraqash, a police officer on duty told it that protesters there "peacefully dispersed."
     
"There were no injuries or deaths, and we persuaded the people gathered for the protest to leave," the officer was quoted as saying. Uyugurs, who number more than 16 million, constitute a distinct, Turkic-speaking, Muslim minority in northwestern China and Central Asia.
     
China, the radio noted, has waged a campaign over the last decade against what it says are violent separatists and Islamic extremists who aim to establish an independent state in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, which shares a border with Afghanistan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Mongolia.
     
In March, Chinese authorities announced that they had foiled a plot by Uyugur terrorists targeting the Beijing Olympics. In the early 1990s, Uyugurs in Xinjiang launched large-scale riots, attacking and killing Chinese officials. Chinese authorities alleged that 162 people were killed and 440 injured in the riots that prompted a harsh crackdown.

After the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States, Beijing took the position that Uyugur groups were connected with al-Qaeda and that one group, the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), was a "major component of the terrorist network headed by Osama bin Laden." The ETIM has denied that charge.


Source : PTI

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