Turky, July 14: An official Chinese newspaper urged Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday to take back remarks that genocide was being committed in China’s Muslim region of Xinjiang, where rioting killed 184 people.
In Xinjiang’s worst ethnic violence in decades, Uighurs attacked Han Chinese, the country’s predominant ethnic group, in the regional capital Urumqi on July 5 after police tried to break up a protest against fatal attacks on Uighur workers at a factory in south China.
Han Chinese launched revenge attacks two days later.
In an editorial headlined “Don’t twist facts”, the English-language China Daily said the fact 137 of the 184 victims were Han Chinese “speaks volumes for the nature of the event”.
The death toll included 46 Uighurs, a Turkic people who are largely Muslim and share linguistic and cultural bonds with Central Asia.
The newspaper urged Erdogan to “take back his remarks … which constitute interference in China’s internal affairs”.
In comments broadcast live on NTV television last Friday, Erdogan told reporters: “The incidents in China are, simply put, a genocide. There’s no point in interpreting this otherwise.”
He called on Chinese authorities to intervene to prevent more deaths.
Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi told his Turkish counterpart by telephone on Sunday the Urumqi riots were a grave crime orchestrated by the “three evil forces”, state news agency Xinhua said, referring to “extremism, separatism and terrorism”.
On Monday, patrolling police shot dead two knife-wielding Uighurs and wounded a third to stop them from attacking a fourth Uighur, a security guard at a mosque in Urumqi.
One of the suspects had tried to grab the imam’s microphone, Xinhua said. Minutes later, one jumped to his feet, unfurled a green banner and shouted calls for “jihad”, or holy war.
The trio had tried to force Muslims at the mosque to follow them into the streets, Xinhua said, apparently to protest. They chased the guard when he tried to stop them.
GROWING TIES
Turkey has sought to boost ties with China, the world’s third-biggest economy. President Abdullah Gul last month became the first Turkish president to visit China in 15 years, signing $1.5 billion worth of trade deals, according to Turkish media.
Gul also visited Xinjiang during his trip.
Turkish nationalists see Xinjiang as the easternmost frontier of Turkic ethnicity. Thousands of Uighurs live in Turkey.
Xinjiang has long been a tightly controlled hotbed of ethnic tensions, fostered by an economic gap between Uighurs and Han, government controls on religion and culture and an influx of Han migrants. Uighurs make up almost half of Xinjiang’s 20 million people, but are a minority in the regional capital Urumqi.
More than 1,600 people were wounded and 1,000 detained in an ensuing crackdown.
Also on Monday, officials in Yining city, about 700 km (435 miles) west of Urumqi, announced that more than 70 members of two “violent gangs” had been rounded up, the semi-official China News portal (www.chinanews.com.cn) reported.
Beijing does not want to lose its grip on Xinjiang, a vast desert territory that borders Russia, Mongolia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India, has abundant oil reserves and is China’s largest natural gas-producing region.
China has blamed the ethnic unrest on exiled Uighur separatists. They deny the charges.
—-Agencies