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  • Xinjiang Riots Confound Islamists

    XINJIANG RIOTS CONFOUND ISLAMISTS
    By Sreeram Chaulia

    Asia Times Online
    July 27 2009
    Hong Kong

    Despite the outbreak of devastating violence affecting the Uyghur
    Muslim minorities in China's Xinjiang region, the Muslim world has
    not shrieked unanimously or decisively in outrage. More Muslims in
    far-flung parts of the planet protested the denial of democratic rights
    in Iran in the last few days than the plight of their co-religionists
    in Xinjiang.

    Since the state crackdown after the street battles took hold in
    Urumqi, Kashgar and other parts in Xinjiang, the protest banner has
    been languishing in the hands of only a handful of ethnic

    Uyghur citadels outside China. This is a far cry from millions
    of angry fellow Muslims moved by solidarity for Uyghur activists
    demanding self-determination from Chinese rule.

    As an issue, Xinjiang has failed to whip up pan-Islamic fervor despite
    the steady marginalization of the largely Sunni Muslim Uyghurs under
    Chinese communist control.

    Over the years, spleen vented at abuses or humiliation of Muslims
    and their sacred symbols has been channeled into mass protests
    from Morocco to Malaysia. The wave of disturbances following the
    publication of insulting cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed in Denmark
    in 2005 shook virtually every place on Earth where Muslims resided in
    sizeable numbers. Death threats, burning of effigies, arson against
    public utilities, torching of embassies, bomb attacks and related
    acts resulted at that time in the deaths of over 139 people. The
    conflagration was so forceful that the media dubbed it the "Cartoon
    intifada"- a dark pun on the Palestinian uprisings, which usually
    set fire to the Muslim sensibility, irrespective of nationality.

    Earlier in 2005, when Newsweek magazine alleged that some American
    personnel manning the Guantanamo Bay prison had deliberately flushed
    copies of the Koran down the toilet, it set off a furor in countries
    as far apart as Pakistan, Egypt and Indonesia. So infuriating was
    the memory of this act that it inspired one of the Pakistani-origin
    suicide bombers, Shehzad Tanweer, to bomb the London public transport
    system in July 2005.

    Come July 2009 and the Xinjiang violence, where is the inflamed
    "Muslim street" and its rabble-rousing leaders? Officially, Turkey was
    the only country which huffed that "genocide" was being committed by
    China against the Uyghurs. But Ankara's harsh language had more to do
    with ethnic affinity for Uyghurs, who are racially Turkic in origin,
    than with a general sympathy for "Muslim brothers and sisters".

    Thousands of Uyghur immigrants live in Turkey and remind Turkish
    nationalists of the dream of an independent "East Turkestan" (the
    former name of Xinjiang). While most contemporary Turks have mixed
    blood after mingling with Europeans and Arabs, the Uyghurs isolated
    themselves from other ethnic groups and are admired by Turks as the
    closest to their pure-bred ancestors. The survival of the Uyghurs,
    who face demographic flooding in China, is associated with stirrings
    of national identity in Turkey.

    It is because of such emotional attachment to Uyghurs that the
    Turkish Industry minister risked economic relations with Beijing
    by urging a boycott of Chinese imported goods after violence flared
    up in Urumqi. As many as 107 Turkish lawmakers from a China-Turkey
    inter-parliamentary group resigned in disgust. Thousands of Turks
    joined Uyghurs in Istanbul and other Turkish cities after Friday
    prayers chanting "Murderer China" and "No to ethnic cleansing."

    A Turkish delegation of five MPs, led by the chairman of the Committee
    on Human Rights, Zafer Uskul, announced that they would travel
    to Xinjiang to assess the situation on the ground. The very tag
    "human rights" which these MPs carried raised antlers in Beijing,
    which unceremoniously squelched the proposed trip without offering
    a public explanation. More than 12 days since the Turkish delegation
    expressed intent, it is still waiting for China's permission.

    Turkey's angst over Xinjiang did not infect or enthuse other Muslim
    countries, not even in its immediate neighborhood. Many observers
    noted the irony that a state which many believe has yet to accept its
    own genocide against Armenia during World War I is casting stones at
    China with the slogan of genocide against Uyghurs.

    The only non-Turkic Muslim country where some noise was drummed
    up immediately after the Xinjiang mayhem was Indonesia. Islamic
    organizations in Jakarta gathered before the Chinese embassy,
    displaying flags and posters and criticizing Beijing's treatment
    of Uyghurs. They reiterated the pet project of "holy war" against
    infidels. The timing of these demonstrations could be related to
    Indonesia's presidential elections, which were just around the corner
    as flames broke out around Urumqi.

    Apart from this, a shady Algerian outfit known as "al-Qaeda in the
    Islamic Maghreb" issued a threat that it would target Chinese people
    abroad in revenge for "the deaths of Muslims" in Xinjiang. Some
    strategic consultants aver that "jihadists want to see action against
    China" for its harsh policies towards Uyghurs, but much of this
    remains in the realm of speculation.

    A key Muslim country, Iran, which has a history of kicking up storms
    over desecration of Islamic symbols (recall the Salman Rushdie affair)
    and the sufferings of fellow Muslims (both Shi'ites and Sunnis), has
    notably remained silent on Xinjiang. There appears to be a verbal pact
    between Tehran and Beijing that they will not berate each other over
    internal political challenges. Tehran's absolute tight-lippedness on
    the Uyghur question is likely to be payback for Beijing's recognition
    of President Mahmud Ahmadinjad's controversial re-election in June.

    The general realization that Iran needs China on its side at the UN
    Security Council on each occasion when the former's nuclear program
    comes under the scanner seems to have also held back the fire-spewing
    ayatollahs from denouncing the bloodshed in Xinjiang.

    Why did Islamic establishments and publics let go of the Xinjiang
    violence so lightly, with barely a murmur or two? The answer lies in
    the complicated construction of enemies by Islamists. The "West", as a
    category, has been blamed by radical Muslims as the bane which ruined
    former Islamic political and cultural glory. So, when atrocities or
    slights are seen to be committed against Islam and its adherents in
    a European or North American country, they confirm the pre-existing
    prejudices and hatreds nursed by the Muslim street and its instigators
    in positions of power.

    Sometimes, the "West" is also extended to include countries like
    Russia, Israel and India - all of whom are viewed by Islamists and
    their followers to be oppressing Muslims in their respective disputed
    territories. But China's image as a staunch rival of Western powers
    and which does not intervene in the Middle East confuses hardline
    Muslims, who place it in a nebulous mental space.

    China does not fit neatly into the binary jihadist classification of
    the world into dar-ul-Islam (a land where Islamic laws are followed
    and the ruler is a Muslim) and dar-ul-Harb (a land ruled by infidels
    and where Muslims suffer).

    That China has so far escaped major jihadist attacks on its soil
    or its overseas representations in spite of its harshness towards
    Uyghurs is not a function of its superior counter-terrorism strategies
    but rather of the label fixation among Islamists. The West, however
    geographically and politically incongruous a concept, continues to
    be the favorite dartboard for fiery Muslims.

    It is a fixation that absorbs the Islamist heat and allows China a
    free hand to deal severely with the Uyghurs.

    Sreeram Chaulia is associate professor of world politics at the Jindal
    Global Law School in Sonipat, India.
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