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Unrest in China's Xinjiang region kills 21 people
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) April 24, 2013


US presses China on Uighur rights after unrest
Washington (AFP) April 24, 2013 - The United States on Wednesday urged China to safeguard the rights of its Uighur minority and carry out a transparent probe of the latest violence in which 21 people died.

State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell called on China to "take steps to reduce tensions and promote long-term stability in Xinjiang," the vast and ethnically divided western region.

"We urge the Chinese authorities to conduct a thorough and transparent investigation of this incident and to provide all Chinese citizens -- including Uighurs -- the due-process protections to which they're entitled," he said.

Chinese officials said that police officers and social workers -- including 10 from the mostly Muslim Uighur community -- were among the dead in gun fights Tuesday in Barchuk county, blaming the violence on "terrorists."

Advocacy groups and experts say China has produced little evidence of organized terrorism in Xinjiang and point to long-standing resentment among Uighurs over limited freedoms and the growing presence of majority Han.

Ventrell said the United States was "deeply concerned" by accounts of discrimination against Uighurs and other Muslims in China.

"We urge the Chinese government to cease policies that seek to restrict the practice of religious beliefs across China. But we've been particularly concerned about the Uighurs," he said.

China frequently voices anger at US criticism of its human rights record, although the world's two largest economies cooperate frequently in other areas, including trade and on the showdown with Beijing's ally North Korea.

Ventrell said that the US ambassador to China, Gary Locke, was coincidentally in Xinjiang on Tuesday as part of a US trade delegation that included energy, rail and transport companies.

Twenty-one people, including police officers and social workers, were killed in violent clashes in China's ethnically divided western region of Xinjiang, officials said on Wednesday.

Gun fights broke out in Barchuk county in the west of the province after police went to search the home of locals suspected of possessing illegal knives, a report on Tianshan Net, a government-run news website, said.

Foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said 15 police and social workers were killed in the violence, which occurred Tuesday -- among them 10 from China's mostly Muslim Uighur ethnic minority, who live mainly in Xinjiang.

Two other Uighurs were injured.

Xinjiang, a region about twice the size of Turkey, is home to around nine million ethnic Uighurs, many of whom complain of religious and cultural repression by Chinese authorities. The region is regularly hit by unrest.

Officials and state media blame the unrest on "terrorists". But some experts say the government has produced little evidence of an organised terrorist threat, adding the violence stems more from long-standing local resentment.

Among the dead were six police officers, Hou Hanmin, director of the Xinjiang government news office, told AFP.

Another six "thugs" were shot dead in the violence. Hou said they were Uighurs. Another eight people were detained.

The foreign ministry's Hua said initial investigations indicated they were a gang planning to carry out violent terrorist activities.

"The current situation in Xinjiang is on the whole good. But there are a handful of terrorist forces doing whatever they can to try to disrupt the current trend of stability and development in Xinjiang," she said.

"Their schemes do not enjoy popular support and will not succeed."

China has repeatedly accused ethnic Uighurs of carrying out terrorist activities in the province, where 20 men were jailed in March on terrorism charges, which a Uighur rights group branded "repressive".

Riots between Uighurs and members of China's Han ethnic majority in Xinjiang's capital Urumqi in 2009 killed around 200 people, leading the ruling Communist Party to tighten surveillance and boost investment in the region.

The province saw more than half of China's "endangering state security" trials last year, but is home to less than two percent of the country's population, suggesting "ethnic discrimination", the Dui Hua Foundation advocacy group said.

The United States urged China to safeguard the rights of its Uighur minority and carry out a transparent probe of the latest violence.

State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell called on China to "take steps to reduce tensions and promote long-term stability in Xinjiang".

"We urge the Chinese authorities to conduct a thorough and transparent investigation of this incident and to provide all Chinese citizens -- including Uighurs -- the due-process protections to which they're entitled," he said.

According to official figures, 46 percent of Xinjiang's population is Uighur, while another 39 percent are Han Chinese, after millions moved to the area in recent decades.

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