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Communist China's Policy of Oppression in East Turkestan

Communist China's Policy of Oppression in East Turkestan

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It has been shown <strong>in</strong> the preced<strong>in</strong>g<br />

sections that the lands <strong>of</strong> <strong>East</strong> <strong>Turkestan</strong><br />

have been Muslim for the last 1,000 years.<br />

Yet for more than half a century now, it has been liv<strong>in</strong>g under<br />

occupation by the Ch<strong>in</strong>ese adm<strong>in</strong>istration. A graffiti on a door at the<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Urumchi, described by Andrew Higg<strong>in</strong>s (correspondent<br />

<strong>of</strong> The Independent) as "sheer racial venom" clearly reflects the Ch<strong>in</strong>ese<br />

view <strong>of</strong> the Uighur Turks:<br />

Make Uyghur men our slaves forever and take Uyghur women as<br />

prostitutes for generations. 25<br />

Ch<strong>in</strong>a ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>s up to 1 million soldiers under arms <strong>in</strong> the region,<br />

and controls everyth<strong>in</strong>g that the Muslims <strong>in</strong> <strong>East</strong> <strong>Turkestan</strong> do. All vehicles<br />

are stopped at military checkpo<strong>in</strong>ts set up along the roads, the<br />

men are sometimes <strong>in</strong>sulted and slapped about as their cars are<br />

searched, and Muslim women are abused. Ch<strong>in</strong>ese pressure is not restricted<br />

to stopp<strong>in</strong>g vehicles or frequent house searches by the military.<br />

The June 29, 2000 edition <strong>of</strong> the Japanese Ma<strong>in</strong>ichi Daily News described<br />

the oppression <strong>in</strong> the follow<strong>in</strong>g terms:<br />

Ch<strong>in</strong>ese control [over <strong>East</strong> <strong>Turkestan</strong>] grows ever tighter and more <strong>in</strong>tolerable.<br />

People's Liberation Army soldiers are everywhere.<br />

Travel and attendance at mosques are restricted.<br />

Communications are primitive and policed. Few farm villages<br />

have telephones, and urban phones are liable to<br />

be tapped. One can be jailed for years on mere<br />

suspicion <strong>of</strong> subversion. 26<br />

Muslims are arrested on <strong>in</strong>valid<br />

grounds and sent <strong>of</strong>f to

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