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Old 07-06-2009, 02:47 AM   #1 (permalink)
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Location: China
Protest in Urumchiy is RIOT

First of all,I am a chinese,first time to say something here.

You may know that these days something unhappy happened in western China.

I do not want to say the details about it because we can get it through the mass media.

I'm really infuriated when I heard this.As we know,America is a country famous for its liberty and freedom.And I'm sure most Americans will be in the right.

Do you know all of us are used by the goverment,politics,and the media.I don't know this time what the media will say about it.I've searched the CNN website,maybe it's just OK.

The thing I want to say is everybody loves peace.There is no discrimination exists.I just wonder how the guys in Urumchiy Xinjiang are instigated to take part in such a riot so easily!They kill,they burn,they shout........I just wonder.They have not realised that they are used to be criminals.I just wonder why this kind of person are so easily instigated.Realy stupid,doesn't it?Some of this guys will be arrested because of the crime,but the truly murderers remain at large abroad.

This kind of things happened and hanppened,and it will continue.

For me personally I don't want to see anything like this,which innocent persons are used by the goverment and all kinds of organizations,happens again.

---------- Post added at 02:47 AM ---------- Previous post was at 02:29 AM ----------

I feel the way CNN combining the words and images when they are reporting is funny.They are always misleading the audience.The Han people is the mainy victims in this accident.They are punched and injured.

BUT what is really FUNNY is that when the CNN is talking about the police's action,the image we can see is some injured Han people.FUNNY isn't it?CNN is just suggestting that these injured guys are bit by the police.But the truth is just the opposite.

CNN is trying to tell everybody that everything about China is evil~But the fact is the Han people is very containing maybe because of the history reason,everybody is familiar with being containing.
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Old 07-06-2009, 05:49 AM   #2 (permalink)
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I'll post an article for perspective. (From the Associated Press.)

Quote:
Violent street battles kill dozens in China
William Foreman

Urumqi, China — Associated Press Last updated on Monday, Jul. 06, 2009 08:47AM EDT

Violent street battles killed at least 140 people and injured 828 others in the deadliest ethnic unrest to hit China's volatile western Xinjiang region in decades, and officials today said the death toll was expected to rise.

Security forces have clamped down on the city of Urumqi and set up checkpoints to catch any fleeing rioters, state media reported, after tensions between ethnic Muslim Uighur people and China's Han majority erupted into riots.

Rioters on Sunday overturned barricades, attacking vehicles and houses, and clashed violently with police, according to media and witness accounts. State television aired footage showing protesters attacking and kicking people on the ground. Other people, who appeared to be Han Chinese, sat dazed with blood pouring down their faces.

There was little immediate explanation for how so many people died. The government blamed Uighur exiles for stoking the unrest. Exile groups said the violence started only after police began violently cracking down on a peaceful protest.

About 1,000 to 3,000 people had gathered Sunday in the regional capital for the protest that apparently spun out of control. Accounts differed over what happened, but the violence seemed to have started when the crowd of protesters refused to disperse.

The official Xinhua News Agency reported hundreds of people were arrested. Mobile phone service provided by at least one company was cut today to stop people from organizing further action in Xinjiang.

The demonstrators had been demanding justice for two Uighurs killed last month during a fight with Han Chinese co-workers at a factory in southern China.

Tensions between Uighurs and the majority Han Chinese are never far from the surface in Xinjiang, China's vast Central Asian buffer province, where militant Uighurs have waged a sporadic, violent separatist campaign.

Uighurs make up the largest ethnic group in Xinjiang, but not in the capital of Urumqi, which has attracted large numbers of Han Chinese migrants. The city of 2.3 million is now about overwhelmingly Chinese — a source of frustration for native Uighurs.

Wu Nong, director of the news office of the Xinjiang provincial government, said more than 260 vehicles were attacked or set on fire in Sunday's unrest and 203 houses were damaged. She said 140 people were killed and 828 injured in the violence.

She did not say how many of the victims were Han or Uighurs.

Xinhua quoted regional Police Chief Liu Yaohua as saying several hundred people had been arrested in connection with the riot and police were searching for about 90 other “key suspects.” He said checkpoints had been set up in the city and in neighbouring Changji and Turpan prefectures to prevent the rioters from fleeing. Mr. Liu also said the death toll was expected to rise.

Uighur exiles condemned the crackdown.

“We are extremely saddened by the heavy-handed use of force by the Chinese security forces against the peaceful demonstrators,” said Alim Seytoff, vice president of the Washington-based Uyghur American Association. “We ask the international community to condemn China's killing of innocent Uighurs. This is a very dark day in the history of the Uighur people.”

The association, led by a former prominent Xinjiang businesswoman now living in America, Rebiya Kadeer, estimated that 1,000 to 3,000 people took part in the protest.

Xinjiang Governor Nur Bekri said in a televised address early today that Uighur exiles led by Ms. Kadeer of caused the violence, saying, “Rebiya had phone conversations with people in China on July 5 in order to incite, and Web sites ... were used to orchestrate the incitement and spread propaganda.”

A government statement quoted by Xinhua said the violence was “a pre-empted, organized violent crime. It is instigated and directed from abroad and carried out by outlaws in the country.”

Mr. Seytoff dimissed the accusations. “It's common practice for the Chinese government to accuse Ms. Kadeer for any unrest” in Xinjiang, he said.

The clashes Sunday in Urumqi echoed last year's unrest in Tibet, when a peaceful demonstration by monks in the capital of Lhasa erupted into riots that spread to surrounding areas, leaving at least 22 dead. The Chinese government accused Tibet's exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, of orchestrating the violence — a charge he denied.

Many Uighurs yearn for independence for Xinjiang, a sprawling region rich in minerals and oil that borders eight Central Asian nations. Critics say the millions of Han Chinese who have settled here in recent years are gradually squeezing the Turkic people out of their homeland.

But many Chinese believe the Uighurs are backward and ungrateful for the economic development the Chinese have brought to the poor region.

Adam Grode, an American Fulbright scholar studying in Urumqi, described a heavy police and military presence in the city. “There are soldiers everywhere, police are at all the corners. Traffic has completely stopped but people are walking on the sidewalks.”

He said authorities took him to the police station this morning after seeing him taking photographs from his apartment window. They deleted his photos, confiscated his passport and released him. They gave no reason for taking his passport but said it would be returned Tuesday.

Mr. Seytoff said he had heard from two sources that at least two dozen people had been killed by gunfire or crushed by armoured police vehicles just outside Xinjiang University.

Wang Kui, an official with the Foreign Affairs Department at the university, said she aware of no such incident. She said no students from the university were among those killed or injured. “We are not allowing students to come and go because the situation is chaotic at the moment,” Ms. Wang said. “All the students are at school, and we are taking care of them. But we are not clear about what's been going on outside.”

China Mobile phone service was suspended in the region “to help keep the peace and prevent the incident from spreading further,” a customer service representative in Urumqi said. The woman would give only her surname, Yang.

Previous mass protests quelled by armed forces became signal events for Xinjiang's separatist movement. In 1990, about 200 Uighurs shouting for holy war protested through Baren, a town near the Afghan border, resulting in violence that left at least two dozen people dead.

In 1997, amid a wave of bombings and assassinations, a protest by several hundred Uighurs in the city of Yining against religious restrictions turned into an anti-Chinese uprising that left at least 10 dead.

In both cases pro-independence groups said the death tolls were several times higher, and the government never conducted a public investigation into the events.
Things are looking quite ugly. Any idea of how Western media (i.e. CNN) is generally looking at this?
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Last edited by Baraka_Guru; 07-06-2009 at 05:52 AM..
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