-
江左夷吾:Chinese minorities & Taiwan - [江左文集]
2009-08-06
版权声明:转载时请以超链接形式标明文章原始出处和作者信息及本声明
http://montager.blogbus.com/logs/43605492.html
Doug
I thought the below article was interesting - especially the last paragraph where he ties it together with Taiwan.
Bill
China's Minority Problem
By Richard Halloran
The civil strife in the Xinjiang region of northwestern China has been a stark reminder that China, despite the economic, military, and diplomatic advances of the last three decades, is still a fragile empire that could break apart as it has periodically in the past.
Fighting between Uighurs and Chinese armed with clubs, knives, and steel pipes left nearly 200 dead, 1000 injured, and the Communist Party alarmed. President Hu Jintao abruptly left a G8 economic summit in Italy to hurry home, the People's Armed Police flooded the streets of the provincial capital in Urumqi, and the government's news agency, Xinhua, and the party's newspaper, People's Daily, appealed for national unity.
Beijing also sought to blame the US for the violence. China Daily, Beijing's English language newspaper, asserted that the US government "is massively intervening into the internal politics of China." The motive, the newspaper contended, arose from "the strategic location of Xinjiang" and its "importance for China's future economic and energy cooperation with Russia" and central Asian nations.
China's 50-55 minorities (government figures differ) comprise less than eight percent of the nation's population but they are situated in critical areas along the country's periphery. Since the Han Dynasty 2000 years ago, China has conquered nations and tribes to assemble the empire of the 21st century. The uprising in Tibet before the Beijing Olympics in 2008 reflected a wider unrest among the non-Chinese in the border regions.
Like the Uighurs, most of the minorities have their own languages and cultures and have not been integrated into Chinese society. The Uighurs are Muslims related to the Tajiks, Kazakhs, and other Turkic people of central Asia. Some Uighurs, like some Tibetans, seek independence from China but most would appear to be satisfied with more autonomy and less control from Beijing.
Read More Commentary and Analysis on China at Around The World!
Perhaps the most intense grievance the Tibetans, Uighurs, and other minorities have is that mainstream Chinese, with government and party encouragement, have been moving into Tibet and Xinjiang. These Chinese control local governments, have preference in jobs, and generally look down on the minorities.
Gideon Rachman, who writes about foreign affairs in the Financial Times in Britain, says "China's emotional and affronted reaction to the upheavals in Xinjiang is typical of an empire under challenge." He writes: "China is especially ill-equipped to understand ethnic nationalism within its borders because many government officials simply do not accept, or even grasp, the idea of "'self-determination.'"
"Yet the idea that Tibet and Xinjiang could aspire to be separate nations is by no means absurd," he says. Both experienced independence in the 20th century, he notes, pointing to a short-lived East Turkestan Republic in Xinjiang that was extinguished by the People's Liberation Army in 1949 and de facto independence in Tibet between 1912 and 1949.
Arthur Waldron, a scholar at the University of Pennsylvania who specializes in Chinese affairs, agreed but argued that Beijing's "biggest problems are with the Chinese - or Han - population. The thousands of demonstrations reported every year are overwhelmingly Han; dissent is spearheaded by the Han, and most importantly, given that the most powerful jobs in government and the most important roles in society are in their hands, the Han are the group that can make or break the communist government."
Several years ago in a tea shop in Shanghai, a Chinese editor drew a connection between the issue of Taiwan and the minorities in China. "I think Taiwan should be part of China," she said, "but it's not worth fighting over. What I worry about, if we let Taiwan go, then the Tibetans and the Uighurs and maybe others will want to leave China."
"If that happens," she lamented, "what will happen to my country?"----------------------------------------------
Bill,
I bet there must have been a scene like this in Russia decades ago:
Several years ago in a fur shop in St. Petersburg, a Russian editor drew a connection between the issue of Georgia and the minorities in Russia. "I think Georgia should be part of Russia," she said, "but it's not worth fighting over. What I worry about, if we let Georgia go, then the Ukrainians and the Belorussians and maybe others will want to leave Russia."
"If that happens," she lamented, "what will happen to my country?"
Well, it did happen. Oh,yeah~Regards,
Douglas Jiang(Chiang)随机文章:
[纽约时报]西藏爆炸事件中16名僧侣被捕 2008-06-06紫竹院公园实地考察小记 2008-07-25调查显示,中国在影响力上仍落后于美国 2008-06-17《走向共和》人物志——李鸿章(1) 2008-05-17中国试图封锁来自T-bag的新闻报道 2008-03-18
收藏到:Del.icio.us