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By EDWARD WONG
Published: January 13, 2010
BEIJING The government of the vast western region of Xinjiang, which last July was racked by Chinas deadliest ethnic violence in decades, is almost doubling its security budget this year compared with 2009, according to a report on Wednesday in China Daily, an official English-language newspaper.
The move is an indication of how deeply worried Chinese officials are that members of the Uighurs and Han ethnic groups could clash again in the cities and desert oasis towns of the oil-rich region, and of the extraordinary measures the officials are taking to clamp down on the area. The Uighurs are a Turkic-speaking, primarily Muslim people who often say the ethnic Han, who make up the majority of Chinas population, discriminate against them. The Uighurs are the largest ethnic group in Xinjiang but are concerned by the displacement of their culture as growing numbers of Han migrants settle in the area.
At least 197 people were killed and more than 1,700 injured, most of them Han, when Uighurs rampaged through parts of the regional capital of Urumqi on July 5, Chinese officials say. Han vigilantes sought revenge over the next few days. The Uighurs had rioted partly in reaction to government handling of an earlier ethnic brawl in southeast China.
This year, the regional government will spend $423 million on public security, up 88 percent over last year, China Daily reported, citing a budget proposal released Tuesday during an annual official conference.
The government decided to increase the spending on public security this year to enhance social stability in Xinjiang, said Wan Haichuan, director of the regional governments finance department.
Speaking at the conference, Nur Bekri, chairman of the regional government, repeated the official assertion that the three forces of terrorism, separatism and religious extremism were responsible for the rioting. He added that authorities foiled organized plots in Kashgar, Hotan, Aksu and Ili soon after the July 5 violence in Urumqi, China Daily reported.
In the aftermath of the rioting, the Chinese government sent units of the Peoples Armed Police, a paramilitary force, into cities and towns across Xinjiang and bolstered the presence of regular uniformed police in the streets. But the rioting had deeply shaken the faith of ordinary Chinese in the abilities of the security forces. Han residents of Urumqi in particular criticized the police for not reacting quickly and forcefully enough to the outbreak of violence, and later called for the resignation of Wang Lequan, the long-serving senior Communist Party official in Xinjiang.
The announcement this week of the expanded security budget could help restore confidence among Han residents, but could also raise fears among some Uighurs. Uighur families in Urumqi have said that security forces detained hundreds of Uighur men in the days and weeks after the rioting, and nearly two dozen prisoners have received death sentences, some of which have been suspended.
The government also blocked access to the wider Internet and text messaging for most ordinary residents of Xinjiang, and set up internal Web sites heavy on political propaganda. The government began relaxing the blocks late last month, but residents still cannot freely access the Internet.
The Chinese government also remains concerned about ethnic tensions in Tibetan areas of western China. An uprising swept across those areas in 2008, and the government kept large areas of Tibet locked down last year. China Daily reported Wednesday that Qiangba Puncog, chairman of the Tibet Autonomous Region, is resigning, and that a replacement will be named by Friday. The report indicated that Mr. Qiangba Puncog, an ethnic Tibetan, is resigning probably because he is 62, close to the mandatory retirement age, and did not mention any political motives for the move. The chairman of Tibet answers to the party secretary, who is always ethnic Han and who usually takes a hard line on regional policy.
Source : China Nearly Doubles Security Budget for Xinjiang Region - NYTimes.com