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Xinjiang Province: News & Discussions

I don't think our ancestors were humilated. They were powerful in the Central Asia.... but constant fights with Mongolians, Other Turkic Tribes, Chinese, Famine, Quakes, Harsh living conditions... pressed them to look for better homeland. And We found and claimed it. :)

My sentiment for the Uyghur doesn't come from that my ancestor migrated from Urumçi.... I care about the all Turkic people around the world.

Good enough. Your tribes survived and founded the empire. It was not easy. There are many Turkic language talking people. It's also not a easy work for you to care about everyone. As a philanthropist, you can care more other ethnic groups around world not only your kins. Go ahead and try to do positive contribution to them though I don't think something you talk about Xinjiang is positive.
I always admire those who is inclined to goodness or charity.
 
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I took a road trip by car from Kashgar to Atush and then to Aksu, very scenic trip. Aksu is a relatively common Turkic place name:
Aksu, Kazakhstan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aksu District, Almaty Province - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

I would encourage Turkish people to travel to Xinjiang, you will come back with a more realistic impression of Xinjiang.
 
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China Heightens Security for the Anniversary of the Xinjiang Riots
China Heightens Security for the Anniversary of the Xinjiang Riots
July 4, 2014 | 1116 GMT
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Ethnic Uighur women struggle against Chinese riot police at a protest in Xinjiang province in 2009. (PETER PARKS/AFP/Getty Images)

Summary
Chinese security forces will be on high alert July 5, the fifth anniversary of violent protests in Urumqi, the capital of the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region. The 2009 riots, which saw members of the Uighur ethnic minority group clash with Han Chinese civilians and police forces, resulted in 197 deaths and more than 1,700 injuries, making them one of the largest episodes of violent ethnic unrest in the past decade in China.

Police forces will be on high alert in urban centers across China, an increase from previous years. This expansion and intensification of the authorities' focus can be attributed to an eight-month flurry of violent Uighur-led or -inspired attacks against mostly Han Chinese civilians in cities across China.

Analysis
The Uighurs have been increasingly active over the past year. Following an attack in front of the Tiananmen Rostrum in Beijing in October 2013, the Uighurs organized at least two more attacks against civilian targets in major Chinese urban centers outside of Xinjiang. Kunming, the capital of Yunnan province, was attacked in March and Guangzhou, the capital of Guangdong province, in May. Both incidents involved small groups of knife-wielding attackers targeting civilians at train stations. There have also been two attacks against civilians inside Xinjiang itself. One of these attacks involved a suicide bombing at a train station that was later supposedly claimed by the Turkistan Islamic Party. The other involved assailants driving two vehicles into a morning market frequented by Han Chinese and tossing improvised explosive devices into the crowd while reportedly shouting jihadist slogans. Collectively, these attacks resulted in more than 70 deaths and 200 injuries.



Click to Enlarge

The attacks of the last eight months indicate a potential shift in the nature of the security threat posed by ethnic groups. These in turn are driven by socioeconomic, religious and political tensions, not only in Xinjiang but nationwide. Organized terrorist attacks against civilians in China are not unprecedented, but they are rare. The rapid succession of Uighur attacks, as well as the methodological similarities between several of them -- target sets, locations and linkages to religious extremism -- suggest that this round of attacks could be a new trend.

It is still unclear whether and to what extent the recent attacks were coordinated. Some attacks show little sign of collaboration beyond individuals or small groups responding to localized interests. Others -- such as the suicide bombing at a train station in Urumqi on April 30, timed to coincide with Chinese President Xi Jinping's visit to the region -- appear to have benefited from some degree of organization by, or liaison with, established terrorist groups, in this case the Turkistan Islamic Party.


Conversation: Uighur Separatism and Chinese Foreign Policy
Only time will provide greater clarity about the degree of organization and coordination of the perpetrators. With each attack, more is revealed about the motivations of the attackers, such as whether they are local, regional or global in scope and whether primarily ethnically- or religiously-inspired. There is also much to be learned about the relationship between militant activity in Xinjiang and the wider Muslim world.

What is clear is that Beijing considers the attacks significant. Following the May 22 attack on a morning market in downtown Urumqi, the Chinese president personally called for a one-year anti-terrorism campaign to root out terrorism and religious extremism in Xinjiang. The campaign is still in its infancy, but already well over 100 suspected terrorists and separatists have been apprehended, many of whom have already been tried and sentenced to prison or death. On at least two occasions in the past six weeks, Chinese authorities have reported seizing significant amounts of explosive material, other bomb-making equipment, knives and assorted weapons during raids on militant bases.

On June 20, the Chinese government announced a crackdown on Internet material promoting religion-inspired militancy. Chinese police said they believe the majority of those taking part in recent attacks were exposed to "extremist content" through the Internet, and that the majority of this content comes from outside China's borders. This could indicate that Beijing takes seriously the possibility that the recent attacks are symptomatic of changes in the underlying ethnic, political and security dynamics of Xinjiang. Internal factors, such as increased industrial development and Han in-migration are influential, as are external factors, such as the Islamist militant activity underway in the Middle East and South Asia. Beijing fears that these changes, if left unchecked, could coalesce into something much larger and potentially more dangerous.

A coordinated terrorist insurgency in Xinjiang, whether homegrown or organized and directed from beyond China's borders, remains a distant prospect. But the Chinese government is preparing for the worst. The days and weeks surrounding the fifth anniversary of the Urumqi riots will test that preparation, as well as the effectiveness, of Beijing's anti-terrorism campaign. There are myriad differences between the attacks of the past eight months and the riots of 2009, which were comparatively uncoordinated but much larger. The riots also bore little or no religious message, instead inflamed by ethnic, historical and socio-economic tensions. However, in one important respect the recent wave of attacks fits firmly within the legacy and paradigm of the 2009 riots. The civil unrest brought a definitive end to the notion that Uighur ethnic unrest and militancy would focus on the Chinese government alone, rather than target the Chinese people. By exploiting the vulnerabilities of a civilian population, the violence opened a window that was bound to be exploited eventually with any number of smaller attacks.
 
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China Focus: New road exemplifies Xinjiang prosperity,stability drive

(Xinhua) 15:19, July 05, 2014

URUMQI, July 5 -- With construction forging ahead of an expressway linking Aksu toKashgar, Xinjiang will put another economic trunk line into use this year to boost its less developed southern area by cashing in on the country's strategy of opening to the west.

Stretching 428.5 km, the longest expressway under construction in China will facilitate economic exchanges between southern Xinjiang and the regional capital of Urumqi upon its completion, according to the project headquarters.

The road is also set to become an important corridor to Central Asia and Europe. Just as Aksu used to be a key stop along the ancient Silk Road, it will play a major part in the Silk Road Economic Belt, the modern international trade network proposed by Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Five years after rioting thugs killed nearly 200 people and injured another 1,700 in Urumqi on July 5, 2009, Xinjiang has been working to get rid of the shadow of terrorism through sound governance and the pursuit of lasting social stability and economic prosperity.

Zhang Chunxian, secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Regional Committee, said he foresaw Xinjiang as a "bridgehead" in China's westward opening at an international symposium held in Urumqi shortly after China, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan jointly had their part of the ancient Silk Road inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage list in late June.

With geographical advantages, Xinjiang witnessed the integration of different civilizations in history and has now come to its golden age of development, said Zhang.

To spearhead the construction of the Silk Road Economic Belt project, which could involve over 40 Asian and European countries and regions with a combined population of three billion, Xinjiang must build itself into a regional traffic hub complete with a sound transport network covering its northern, central and southern areas to connect China with Central, West and South Asia as well as Europe and Africa.

The autonomous region has also been tasked with seizing the time to build itself into a regional trade, finance and logistics center.

Zhang is meanwhile aiming to boost cultural and education cooperation with countries along the Silk Road Economic Belt to turn Xinjiang into a regional center for culture, science, technology and education.

The healthcare industry will be strengthened through medical exchanges and cooperation with surrounding countries as the regional authority hopes to boost medical tourism.

According to Zhang, Xinjiang is even striving to be China's oil and gas processing and storage center, a large domestic base for coal power and coal chemical industries and wind power generation, as well as a land thoroughfare for energy and resources.

The regional government's development plan was made public after President Xi emphasized the significance of good governance in Xinjiang at the second central work conference on Xinjiang in late May.

Xi said that a priority of good governance is to improve people's livelihood so that everyone from all ethnic groups feels taken care of, and that the government should focus on employment, education and poverty alleviation.

At a meeting of the regional CPC Committee in late June, Zhang Chunxian said that to pursue social stability and better governance under the new circumstances, Xinjiang will modernize its governance system and capability by boosting the local economy and improving the people's livelihood, safeguarding national unity and ethnic solidarity, curbing religious extremism and strengthening the rule of law.

According to the region's official news portal Tianshannet (天山网 - 新疆新闻门户 the current goal of Xinjiang is to contain the permeation of religious extremist forces and terrorist activities, and to maintain social stability and tackle the deep-rooted problems hindering the autonomous region from achieving better governance and lasting peace.

Ma Dazheng, a researcher with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences' Research Center for Chinese Borderland History and Geography Studies, said that the central leadership's vision on the governance of Xinjiang has become clearer with the opening of the second work conference on Xinjiang.

"A major change we have seen over the past five years is that better governance and lasting stability have become the top priority of the administrative goals while development is expanded from economic spheres to the overall development of the society," he observed.

"To improve the societal well-being of the people, ethnic and religious work is essential as half of the Xinjiang population are ethnic minorities and religious."

Pan Zhiping, professor with the Central Asia Research Institute with Xinjiang University, said that an inflection point has been reached in China's anti-terrorism and anti-extremism drive, with many more well-educated people and social leaders among ethnic minorities openly opposing religious extremists.

For instance, an open letter signed by more than 200 Uygur writers, poets and translatorsin Xinjiang has been widely relayed on the Internet denouncing terrorism.

In May, 11 Uygur youths from nine Chinese universities published a letter calling for fellow Uygurs to speak out on religious extremism and lend a hand to youths who may fall prey to it.

"Xinjiang has encountered reckless provocations from religious extremists due to the instability both within and without China. It's important for the administrators to have a clear and thorough understanding of the complexity of anti-terrorism situation and take along-term perspective," said Ma Dazheng.


China Focus: New road exemplifies Xinjiang prosperity, stability drive - People's Daily Online
 
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Last week a top leader of China central intelligence agency was killed in Xinjiang.
 
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you know I noticed highways now days are really good, but the number of cars traveling on them leaves something to be desired. Could be because driving cost more than a HSR ticket, taking into account gas and tickets for the highway.

Which btw are ridiculously high btw.
 
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Six Expressways in Xinjiang totalling 1620km to open in 2014

G3012 Aksu to Kashgar section
S215 Sanchakou to Shache section
S310 Markit to Kashgar section
G30 Wusu to Sayram Lake section
G3015 Karamay to Tacheng section
G3014 Urho to Aletai section


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今年新疆有6条高速公路要通车_新浪新闻 :coffee::enjoy:

Lots more under construction or planned。:tup:

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Wonderland - Xinjiang :enjoy:
 
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