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SINO DAILY
China places six Uighurs on 'terror' list
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) April 6, 2012


China has placed six men from the Uighur ethnic minority on a "terror" list, accusing them of involvement in terrorist training camps and of inciting attacks in the restive western Xinjiang region.

China's Ministry of Public Security said the men, whose names identify them as Uighurs, were members of the outlawed East Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM), blaming one for orchestrating violent attacks in the city of Kashgar last July.

Chinese authorities have accused the ETIM, which wants an independent homeland for Xinjiang's Uighurs, of orchestrating attacks in the region on many occasions.

The United States and the United Nations have listed the group as a "terrorist" organisation, and China has previously said it has operations in Pakistan as well as Afghanistan.

The public security ministry said in a statement late Thursday it had frozen the funds and assets of the six men, whose whereabouts are not known.

Xinjiang has been under heavy security since July 2009, when Uighurs launched attacks on Han people -- who make up most of China's population -- in the regional capital Urumqi.

The government says nearly 200 people were killed and 1,700 injured in the violence, which shattered the authoritarian Communist Party's claims of harmony and unity among the country's dozens of ethnic groups.

Many Uighurs remain angry at the harsh crackdown that followed the violence.

Xinjiang, which borders Pakistan and Afghanistan, is home to around nine million Uighurs, but the number of Han living there has increased dramatically over the past decade.

Government critics say this results from a policy of migration to dilute any Uighur nationalist tendencies and has bred resentment in the region.

China blames much of the violence in the resource-rich region on what it calls the three "evil forces" of extremism, separatism and terrorism.

But some experts doubt terror cells operate in Xinjiang, where the Turkic-speaking Uighurs practise a moderate form of Islam.

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China paper tells soldiers to ignore Internet rumours
Beijing (AFP) April 6, 2012 - China's main military newspaper told soldiers Friday to ignore Internet gossip and close ranks around the government, in the latest sign of official unease ahead of a leadership transition this year.

The Liberation Army Daily warned that the 10-yearly handover of power, which begins later this year when President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao step down from their Communist Party positions, could threaten China's stability.

"This is a year of special significance to the party and to national development," the mouthpiece of the state's military said in a front-page commentary.

"History has shown that whenever the party and the country are facing a major event, whenever reform and development are at a crucial stage, the ideological struggle tends to become more acute and complex, and factors affecting stability will significantly increase."

The paper called for tighter controls on Internet and mobile networks in military compounds to allow troops to "resolutely resist the invasion of all kinds of erroneous ideologies... and not be confused by rumours."

The call followed a surge in groundless online rumours, including about a coup led by security chief Zhou Yongkang, following the March dismissal of rising political star Bo Xilai.

Analysts say the political drama has exposed divisions in the ruling Communist Party as it prepares for a key leadership transition later this year.

China responded by shutting down websites, making a string of arrests and punishing two popular microblogs by barring their users from posting comments to other people's posts for three days.



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SINO DAILY
Nobel laureates urge China to talk to Dalai Lama
Beijing (AFP) April 4, 2012
Twelve Nobel laureates including South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu have written to China's president urging him to open talks with the Dalai Lama after a series of self-immolations by Tibetans. More than 30 Tibetans - many of them Buddhist monks and nuns - have set themselves alight in China's Tibetan-inhabited areas since the start of March 2011 to protest Beijing's rule. "The int ... read more


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