'Capture' of Chinese national fighting with ISIS gives China jitters
September 5, 2014 -- Updated 1218 GMT (2018 HKT)
The Iraqi Army has
captured an Islamic State in Iraq and Syria fighter from China, the
Baghdad-datelined report said. Two pictures accompanied the report: one
showed the captured militant in fatigue pants and a bloodied shirt,
lying on the ground; another showed him escorted by an Iraqi soldier,
his face seemingly swollen.
If true, he would be the first Chinese national to have been caught fighting with ISIS militants.
"We are not able to
verify whether or not the information is true," said Chinese foreign
ministry spokesman Qin Gang, responding to a foreign reporter's
question. "I cannot confirm the information for you."
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It's not clear how many
Chinese nationals may be fighting with the ISIS. Wu Sike, until recently
China's special envoy to the Middle East, earlier stated that there
could be about 100 of them, but Qin Gang said he had no specific numbers
or estimates.
Chinese netizens'
reaction was typically visceral. "Kill them!" commented "Hellen" on the
Iraqi News website. "we chinese are glad to see these muslims' death!"
If such reports are true,
said Chinese commentator Victor Gao, "this will be an additional
evidence that terrorism in China has a strong international connection.
Terrorism does not care about national borders."
It remains unclear if the
captured Chinese national is actually Uighur, a Muslim minority group
in Xinjiang, but Gao seems to assume so.
"In China terrorism is
raising its ugly head and is spreading from Xinjiang to other parts of
China. The underlying drivers for terrorism are mainly the congruence of
domestic and international forces at play among some extreme elements
of the Uighur minority in Xinjiang," he added.
Xinjiang, a
resource-rich and strategically located region in northwest China, for
years has been beset by ethnic violence, which the government blames on
"fenliefenzi" ("separatists"). Uighur exiles and rights activists,
however, blame the unrest on Beijing's allegedly repressive and
discriminatory policies.
A spate of violent incidents have been blamed on the Uighurs.
In March, more than 10 masked people, dressed in identical black outfits and wielding machetes, stabbed passengers in Kunming Railway Station
in Yunnan province, thousands of miles away from Beijing, killing 29
people and injured 143 others. Police killed four of the attackers and
arrested one woman.
In May, terrorists used car bombs to attack an open-air market in Urumqi, the region's capital, leaving 39 dead and 94 injured.
The police later blamed
the knife and bomb attacks on members of the East Turkistan Islamic
Movement (ETIM), an Islamist group founded in 1993 by Uighur militants
seeking an independent state in Xinjiang called East Turkistan.
The ETIM has been
accused by the China and the U.S. of having ties with al Qaeda, but
security analysts disagree on whether such ties actually exist. Uighur
exile groups claim that Beijing uses the ETIM as a red herring to
rationalize its repressive policies against the Uighurs.
If the Iraqi News report
is true, said M. Taylor Fravel, an international relations professor at
MIT, it shows that "radicalization transcends boundaries and regions,
threatening not only countries in the Middle East but also China and the
West. That said, Uighurs have a long history of fighting overseas. I
believe that Uighurs fought against the Soviets in Afghanistan, for
example. So the phenomenon is not a new one."
In 2006, the U.S.
captured 22 Uighur militants fighting in Afghanistan with suspected
links to al Qaeda. They were imprisoned in Guantanamo for five to seven
years and later released after they were reclassified as no longer enemy
combatants. Instead of repatriating them to China, however, they were
sent to Palau and Bermuda.
"China will surely use
this to underscore the challenges it faces in maintaining stability in
Xinjiang, but I don't think that this will alter the policies being
pursued, which seem to be increasing instability and not decreasing it,"
MIT's Fravel said.
Beijing has stepped up its carrot-and-stick efforts to appease local dissatisfaction and curb violence.
Speaking in a two-day
conference on Xinjiang in May, President Xi Jinping promised to enhance
"ethnic unity" in Xinjiang while creating more jobs, providing
accessible education and improving people's livelihoods.
Xi also pledged to
respect the local residents' legitimate religious rights and local
customs "in accordance with laws and regulations."
But Xi also called for a
massive "nets spread from the earth to the sky" to combat terrorists,
stating that the stability of Xinjiang is "strategically vital to the
country's reform and development as well as national security."
In response to the spate of violent attacks, China has launched a one-year campaign against terrorism.
Chinese police in
various cities have held anti-terrorism drills using sophisticated
equipment such as satellite vans, armored cars and modern weapons.
Bulk purchasers of
gasoline are now required to provide identification, secure permits from
local police stations and use only approved containers.
In some places, sales of large knives are controlled or banned.
Local courts in Xinjiang
have been given instructions to deal with terror cases in a "harsh and
quick" manner. In June, China executed 13 people convicted of organizing
and leading terrorist groups.
China's critics fear the campaign could lead to more repressive policies toward Uighurs, widening ethnic divide.
For years tensions have been simmering between the Han Chinese and the Uighur minority nationality.
I saw tensions boil over
in the streets of Urumqi in July 2009, when thousands of angry Uighur
residents, some wielding knives and sticks, rioted in the streets and
attacked Han Chinese, prompting the authorities to call in truckloads of
Chinese soldiers. Nearly 200 people died in the ethnic clashes.
Authorities blame
separatists for fomenting violence, but critics of China's policies say
the root of the problem is widespread alienation among the region's
Muslim Uighur population who resent strict controls on religion and
local culture.
Uighurs also resent the
influx into the region of Han Chinese migrants, who tend to dominate the
local industry and commerce. They complain they are being left behind
by rapid economic development, and are unable to partake of the benefits
from the region's rich resources.
All these, critics say, have made Xinjiang a breeding ground for malcontents.
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