Developereo
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ni ha
They should not, they should be wise not to undermine that trust, and I believe the Chinese government has adequate measures to prevent it. no Uighurs, but the HUI. Although I also have a cautious approach to it.Until now Saudi Arabia is only limited to the impact of religion, they also invest a lot of money to improve local people's lives. It is sardines.
I mean, Saudi Arabia has influence from years ago.
I'm sorry, my friend, you still do not understand China's policy of regional ethnic autonomy, both Xinjiang and Tibet have been very extensive rights of autonomy, certainly no army, the other whether it is self-governance or the central government funds are very Okay, so there are some problems in other areas, not in this, unfortunately, the West still has some impact on promotion.
From what I understand Xinjiang's ratio of Han-UIghur population has changed dramatically over recent decades. The Uighurs are concerned about that.
Again, this is something that other countries have dealt with, so there is precedent about what works better than others. The territorial issue is obviously an internal matter between Chinese government and Uighur leaders.
About the religion and cultural aspects, both the Uighur and Hui practise a variant of Sufi Islam, from what I understand, so Pakistan should be in a good position to mediate.
I fear that if you bring in Saudi Arabia, the Uighurs will move from the Sufi version to the more hardline Wahhabi version of Islam. But as long as the Chinese are keeping an eye on things...