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French journalist Ursula Gauthier kicked out of China for slamming Beijing's Uyghur policy

The terrorist apologists always use the same tactic.

1. Condemn the victims. Never blame the attackers.

2. Claim the evidence is unclear and make excuses.

The rest of the world recognizes terrorist apologists as budding terrorists. You apologists can only view the world from the terrorists' point of view.

Everyone else in the world recognizes the terrorists for who they are: the killers. The Uighurs were, have been, and still are the killers.

Video surveillance footage: beaten to death by Uighurs

F0hvoSm.jpg
 
A long overdue move.

China adopts first counter-terrorism law in history
English.news.cn | 2015-12-27 23:00:01 | Editor: huaxia

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Zhang Dejiang, chairman of the Standing Committee of China's National People's Congress (NPC), presides over the closing meeting of the 18th bimonthly meeting of the National People's Congress (NPC) Standing Committee, in Beijing, capital of China, on Dec. 27, 2015. (Xinhua/Ding Lin)

BEIJING, Dec. 27 (Xinhua) -- China's top legislature on Sunday adopted the country's first counter-terrorism law in the latest attempt to address terrorism at home and help maintain world security.

Lawmakers approved the legislation Sunday afternoon at the end of a week-long bimonthly session of the National People's Congress (NPC) Standing Committee.

At a press conference held on Sunday, An Weixing, an official with the public security ministry, at Sunday's press conference, said China is facing rising threats of terrorism.

"Terrorist attacks have caused heavy losses of people's lives and properties, posing a serious threat to our security, stability, economic development and ethnic unity," An said.

The new law, which will enter into force in January next year, will provide legal support to the country's counter-terrorism activities as well as collaboration with the international society, he said.

The much anticipated couter-terrorism law proposed a national leading organ for counter-terrorism work, which will be in charge of identifying terrorist activities and personnel, and coordinate nationwide anti-terrorist work.

The state will provide necessary financial support for key regions listed in the country's counter-terrorist plan, whereas professional anti-terrorist forces will be established by public security, national security authorities as well as armed forces.

A national intelligence center will be established to coordinate inter-departmental and trans-regional efforts on counter-terrorism intelligence and information.

The term "terrorism" is defined as any proposition or activity -- that, by means of violence, sabotage or threat, generates social panic, undermines public security, infringes on personal and property rights, and menaces government organs and international organizations -- with the aim to realize certain political and ideological purposes.

A statement from NPC Standing Committee earlier this week said the new definition had been inspired by a Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) counter-terrorism convention, and the UN's Declaration on Measures to Eliminate International Terrorism.

A previous draft of the law, submitted in February, did not cover personal and property rights or political and ideological purposes.

"[China] opposes all extremism that seeks to instigate hatred, incite discrimination and advocate violence by distorting religious doctrines and other means, and acts to eradicate the ideological basis for terrorism," the approved bill read.

The new law comes at a delicate time for China and for the world at large - terror attacks in Paris, the bombing of a Russian passenger jet over Egypt, and the brutal killings of hostages committed by Islamic State (IS) extremist group are alerting the world about an ever-growing threat of terrorism.

According to China's top legislator Zhang Dejiang, the new law is an important part for establishing systemic rules for national security.

The law establishes basic principles for counter-terrorism work and strengthens measures of prevention, handling, punishment as well as international cooperation, he said.

Under the new bill, telecom operators and internet service providers are required to provide technical support and assistance, including decryption, to police and national security authorities in prevention and investigation of terrorist activities.

They should also prevent dissemination of information on terrorism and extremism.

Li Shouwei of the National People's Congress (NPC) Standing Committee legislative affairs commission, said the rule accorded with the actual work needed to fight terrorism and was basically the same as other major countries.

"The clause reflects lessons China has learned from other countries and is a result of wide solicitation of public opinion," he added.

"(It) will not affect companies' normal business nor install backdoors to infringe intellectual property rights, or ... citizens freedom of speech on the internet and their religious freedom," Li said.

China's national security law adopted in July also requires Internet and information technology, infrastructure, information systems and data in key sectors to be "secure and controllable".

Before Sunday's new bill, China did not have an anti-terrorism legislation, though related provisions feature in various NPC Standing Committee decisions, as well as the Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure Law and Emergency Response Law.

The NPC's standing committee passed a decision to improve anti-terrorism work in October 2011, but it was never made into law.

The lack of a systematic law in this field had hampered China's fight against terrorism, with measures deemed not forceful enough, analysts say.

In one of most deadly cases, twenty-nine people were killed and scores more injured by knife-wielding assailants at a train station in Yunnan's capital city, Kunming, on March 1, 2014.

Terrorist attacks have brought greater urgency for a counter-terrorism law. The first draft of the law was submitted for review in October 2014 and the second draft in February.

In a separate clause, Sunday's new bill allows police forces, when facing violent attackers with guns or knives, use weapons directly in emergency circumstances.

In the rare reality of a terrorist attack, no institutions or individuals shall fabricate and disseminate information on forged terrorist incidents, report on or disseminate details of terrorist activities that might lead to imitation, nor publish scenes of cruelty and inhumanity in terrorist activities, the new law reads.

None, except news media with approval from counter-terrorism authorities in charge of information distribution, shall report on or disseminate the personal details of on-scene counter-terrorist workers, hostages or authorities' response activities.

The clause was specifically revised to restrict the distribution of terrorism-related information by individual users on social media, earlier reports said.

China adopts first counter-terrorism law in history - Xinhua | English.news.cn
 
So the whole freaking race are terrorists ?
Sorry man , our guys are just pissed off by uythurs
We have had enough of Uythur terrorism.
They haved killed many innocent people , not only Han Chinese but also other ethnic Chinese.
On the other hand , Uythur thieves are messing up the whole country.
They are everywhere. We have suffered that for a long long time .
Can you believe a Uyghur woman steals people in a bus with a baby in her arm when she is pregnant ?

Soon there will be a Muslim uprising in China.
We have many different races of Muslim, even Han Chinese.
Only Uygthur is the trouble maker. We are just too kind to those fkers.
 
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Uighurs are terrorists. The Uighurs have expanded their terrorism empire to include suicide bombings in Indonesia.
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Indonesia arrests two over New Year suicide terror plot - Channel NewsAsia

"An anti-terror squad raided his house in West Java, where they arrested a Uighur, identified only as Alli, and confiscated a suicide vest and material to assemble a bomb."

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I have seen so many videos on YouTube and social media of Chinese attacking little innocent Uygur kids! What is that? Bravery? And then you expect them to not do anything back?
 
pakistan has ensured china the oic wont say anything against the treatment of muslims there
Using the word of generalising muslim is a evil word used only by the West against China.

I am sure these Hui muslim in Ningxia(Xi an province) will not hesitate to join PLA militia in wiping out the Uyghur terrorist in Xinjiang.


Hui muslim support support CPC and I can bet the West and extremism Pakistanis will called any muslim support for CPC as fake muslim. Only anti-CPC can be called true muslim. That is how OP and evil West will believe.

Soon there will be a Muslim uprising in China.


The Hui Muslim are royal support of CPC and they outnumber the Uyghur :enjoy:

36th Division (National Revolutionary Army) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CPC shall send a Hui Muslim battalion to Xinjiang and to hunt them those Uyghur terrorist.
 
Well turkey is the terrorist heartland. They spread their terrorist culture abroad in hopes of igniting some pan-turkey terrorist buIIshit. I say, show no mercy to these terrorist scum.
Karma is striking those Turkish. You can see the double standard they do when they suppress Kurdish while one hand calling China oppress Uyghur. The PKK are making a big killing in Turkey. :enjoy:

China is also using terrorism as an excuse to suppress rights of the Uyghurs in Uyghuristan also known as Xinjiang.

China 'expels' French journalist over Uyghur report - CNN.com

French journalist Ursula Gauthier kicked out of China for slamming Beijing's Uyghur policy
Kevin Wang, CNN

Updated 10:04 PM ET, Sat December 26, 2015

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Ursula Gauthier works at her desk in her apartment in Beijing on December 26, 2015.
Story highlights
  • Gauthier's article described the "merciless crushing of the Muslim Uyghur minority"
  • She said China had no basis for comparing this with the global war on terror
  • China said her article "overtly advocates for acts of terrorism and killings of innocent civilians"
(CNN)Chinese authorities say they're not renewing the press credentials for a French journalist whose recent reporting questioned Beijing's "ulterior motives" in standing in solidarity with France after the November Paris attacks, and criticized China's handling of its Uyghur minority.

Ursula Gauthier, a Beijing-based correspondent for French magazine L'OBS since 2009, wrote in an article published on November 18 -- less than a week after coordinated attacks killed at least 130 people in Paris -- that China had no basis in drawing parallels between the international pledge to fight against terrorism and its own version, that she calls "the merciless crushing of the Muslim Uyghur minority."

"In other words, if China declares its solidarity with nations threatened by Islamic State, in return it expects the support of the international community in its own entanglements with its most restless minority," she added.

The piece drew strong criticism from the Chinese authorities.

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Embassies warn of threats against Westerners in Beijing 01:55
In a statement posted by the Chinese Foreign Ministry Saturday, Spokesperson Lu Kang said Gauthier's article "overtly advocates for acts of terrorism and killings of innocent civilians, and caused public outrage among the Chinese people.

"Given that Gauthier failed to make a serious apology to the Chinese people for her wrongful speech advocating for terrorism acts, it is no longer appropriate for her to continue working in China."

Nothing in common
In her article, Gauthier wrote that shortly after Chinese President Xi Jinping assured French counterpart Francois Hollande of China's commitment to fight against terrorism, Chinese police announced the capture of the leaders of a September 18 attack that claimed some 50 lives at a remote coal mine in Xinjiang's Baicheng County.

Xinjiang violence: Does China have a terror problem?

"But, bloody though it was, the Baicheng attack had nothing in common with the 13th November attacks," Gauthier wrote, according to an English translation of her original report published by China Digital Times.

"In fact it was an explosion of local rage such as have blown up more and more often in this distant province whose inhabitants, turcophone and Muslim Uyghurs, face pitiless repression."

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Xinjiang attacks shifting to civilians 02:41
Chinese authorities and state media presented a different version of the event. They said security forces, along with local officials and residents, carried out a 56-day operation against a group of "violent attackers" responsible for ambushing police and civilians at the mine. The police said the attacks were directly planned by an "extreme organization outside the border," whose members had been watching and listening to extreme religious materials and received specific guidance before carrying out the attack.

All the alleged attackers were killed by November 12, according to the police.

While the Chinese police did not specify the ethnicity of the alleged attackers, Gauthier said they were a small group of Uyghurs "pushed to the limit, probably in revenge for an abuse, an injustice or an expropriation."

Who are the Uyghurs?
The Uyghurs are a predominantly Muslim ethnic group living primarily in China's northwestern Xinjiang, an autonomous region marked by occasional tensions between the Uyghur and the Han Chinese communities. Security has increasingly heightened in Xinjiang over recent years as the area has seen violent incidents such as the 2014 attack targeting civilians an Urumqi market that left at least 31 dead and 90 injured.

"But so long as the Uyghurs' situation continues to get worse, China's magnificent mega-cities will be vulnerable to the risk of machete attacks." Gauthier wrote.

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China's bold ethnic experiment 03:55
Human rights observers accuse China of being heavy-handed and treating the Uyghurs unfairly by restricting their freedom of religion and speech.

Beijing officials say they are only going after perpetrators planning or carrying out terrorist attacks, and accuse western governments, rights activists and journalists of being hypocritical and applying double standards when criticizing China's ethnic policy and management of other domestic issues.

Support
Meanwhile, a number of western journalists and human rights observers were quick to support Gauthier on social media.

Ursula Gauthier won't be going quietly. Chinese media starting to lay out attacks on her. 【热点】这位被外交部取消驻京记者证的法国人,写了什么让人没法忍的话?

— Chris Buckley 储百亮 (@ChuBailiang) December 26, 2015
"Ursula Gauthier won't be going quietly. Chinese media starting to lay out attacks on her," tweeted The New York Times' China correspondent Chris Buckley.

Nicholas Bequelin, Amnesty International's Regional Director for East Asia, tweeted, "Expulsion of French journalist @ugauthier for Xinjiang article opens a new era for foreign media in China. French gvt silence a mistake."

China's Global Times has gone on a campaign to character assassinate reporter Ursula Gauthier - a typical authoritarian strategy.

— Melissa Chan (@melissakchan) December 26, 2015
The French Foreign Ministry said in a Friday statement they regret that Gauthier's credential was not renewed, and they "recall the importance of the role journalists play throughout the world."

Gauthier is the first high-profile foreign journalist to be expelled from China since Al Jazeera's Melissa Chan in 2012.

On Gauthier's expulsion, Chan tweeted, "Gauthier was told she could stay in China if she publicly apologized for... yep, you guess it: hurting the feelings of the Chinese people."

Chinese reaction
But on the other side, Chinese state media and many Chinese Internet users backed the government's decision.

"China ought to send such a voice out to the world. Anyone daring to challenge the justice of humanity is not welcomed by the Chinese people," one Weibo user wrote.

"Gauthier is a terrorist herself since she is advocating for them. I firmly support the government to rid this Gauthier who disguises herself as a journalist, and never allow her to China's territory again," said another.

An online poll conducted by state-run newspaper The Global Times showed 94.6% of nearly 200,000 surveyed people support Gauthier's removal.

Previous criticism
This is not the first time Gauthier has drawn the ire of Beijing authorities.

Earlier this month, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Hua Chunying expressed frustration over Gauthier's reporting on China's counter-terrorism policy.

"We cannot understand why other countries' counter-terrorism policies are legitimate, but China's counter-terrorism activities are so-called ethnic oppression," Hua said. "This is an absurd logic. It is political prejudice and double standards. I think it is necessary to clarify what happened and rectify the issue. "

Foreign journalists in China complain authorities are increasingly restricting press freedom in the country, making it harder and harder for them to report freely. Chinese officials deny the claim, and instead insist foreign journalists should play by the same rules as Chinese journalists and refrain from violating laws and regulations when reporting.

Anti-China Pakistanis are fake Pakistanis and fake muslim. They work for the white man government of Canada and US federal. Their mission is to discord r/s between China and Pakistan so as to support the stance of US federal and West.
They do not care about the well being and progress of Pakistan despite claiming to have the root of Pakistan. They already blend into Whiteman mentality and even the death of any true Pakistanis is not their concern.

Their intention is only western imperalist and complete domination for the West.
 
Karma is striking those Turkish. You can see the double standard they do when they suppress Kurdish while one hand calling China oppress Uyghur. The PKK are making a big killing in Turkey. :enjoy:
Well, you remind me @ArsalanKhan21 has never cried for his Islamic brother who are called Kurdish when they are butchered by the so-called Turks but actually Greeks.
 
http://www.newsweek.com/chinese-persecution-muslim-uighurs-could-drive-them-isis-371362

Opinion
Chinese Persecution of the Muslim Uighurs Could Drive Them to ISIS
By Isabel Larroca On 9/12/15 at 1:37 PM
 

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