COUNT-DOWN TO BEIJING OLYMPICS-II: -INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM
MONITOR---PAPER NO. 411
By B. Raman
With less than a month to go
for the Beijing Olympics, the Chinese authorities are
showing increasing signs of nervousness over possible acts
of terrorism by the Islamic Movement of East Turkestan (IMET)
either in the Olympic venues or in Xinjiang or in any of the
Central Asian Republics or in Pakistan. This nervousness has
been reflected in the forcible closure of nearly 40
allegedly illegal mosques in Xinjiang, more arrests of
alleged terrorists and the execution of the death sentences
awarded by the courts in the past against alleged Uighur
terrorists. The Chinese do not seem to have taken into
consideration the danger that such acts by themselves may
provoke the Uighur dissidents to retaliate against them.
2. The forcible closure of
the so-called unauthorised mosques seems to have been
triggered off by fears that some of these mosques may turn
out to be the Lal Masjids of Xinjiang. The Lal Masjid of
Islamabad became the base of the activities of pro-Al Qaeda
and pro-Taliban Pashtun student extremists last year,
forcing Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf to order the
Army commandoes to raid the Masjid in July last year to
wrest control of the Masjid from the extremists. He
ordered this raid after the students kidnapped some Chinese
women working in local beauty and massage parlours and
accused them of leading an immoral life.
3. The Chinese have been
closely monitoring the situation in the tribal belt of
Pakistan and having frequent interactions with the Pakistani
authorities in order to prevent any act of terrorism mounted
from the Pakistani territory before or during the Olympics.
4. On July 9, 2008, the
Chinese authorities announced the public execution of two Uighurs whose names (Chinese version, not their original
ethnic names) were given out by them as Muheteer Setiwalidi
and Abdulwaili Yiming after they had been convicted by a
Kashgar court on November 9, 2007, on charges of separatist
activities, attending a terrorist training camp and
manufacturing explosives. According to the announcement, the
court had awarded three other Uighurs suspended death
sentences and sentenced 12 other Uighurs to various terms of
imprisonment. All of them were accused of being members of
the IMET. They were reported to have joined the IMET in
August 2005 and were arrested by the Police in January, 2007.
5. The public announcement of
the sentences awarded to the 17 Uighurs came a day after
the police of Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, forcibly
entered a flat to arrest 15 Uighurs, who were also projected
as members of the IMET. Five of them were killed by the
police when they allegedly resisted arrest.
6. While the observance of
the birthday of the Dalai Lama on July 6, 2008, passed off
without any incident in Tibet and other Tibetan-inhabited
areas of China, there were reports of unrest and protest
meetings by Tibetan nomads in the Lithang area of the
Sichuan province when the Chinese banned the holding of the
traditional annual horse-racing festival by the nomads. The
observance of the festival in the beginning of August last
year led to acts of violence when the local police arrested
some nomads for shouting slogans praising the Dalai Lama.
The Chinese apparently did not want to face the risk of a
similar incident this year just a few weeks before the
Olympics. They played it safe by banning the festival. The
People's Liberation Army was able to bring the protests
under control without difficulty, but 600 troops have been
sent to the area to reinforce the local security forces.
7. Meanwhile, 116 Tibetans
arrested during the anti-Beijing uprising in March last are
now being tried by courts in Lhasa on charges of arson,
robbery and attacks on public servants. Forty-two of them
have already been sentenced to various terms of
imprisonment. The trial of the remaining is continuing. The
Chinese authorities have not ruled out the possibility that
some of the remaining may be sentenced to death and
executed.
8. There have been no
reports of fresh arrests in Tibet. Though the Chinese
officials of Tibet have kept up their patriotic re-education
classes, they have been a little more careful to avoid
excesses against the Tibetans because of the widespread
support for the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan cause in the
international community. At a time when the movement for a
boycott of the opening ceremony of the Olympics has stopped
with many world leaders, including President George Bush,
re-affirming their decision to attend the inaugural
function, the Chinese have been avoiding any ham-handed
action against the Tibetans.
9. They are not observing a
similar caution in respect of the Uighurs, who do not have
an iconic leader like the Dalai Lama. Moreover, by
projecting every Uighur dissident arrested as a member of
the pro-Al Qaeda IMET, which is treated as a terrorist
organisation by the US, the Chinese have been able to ensure
that their actions in Xinjiang do not become the focus of
international scrutiny in the days preceding the Olympics.
10. The Chinese are really
nervous about the dangers of an act of jihadi terrorism
during the Olympics. The international community, which too
is nervous, has been giving the benefit of doubt to the
Chinese and is not criticising the action taken by the
Chinese against the Muslim Uighurs in the same manner as it
criticised their action against the Buddhist Tibetans.
11. The anger in Xinjiang
and in the Uighur and Uzbek communities in Pakistan and the
Central Asian Republics over the Chinese actions and the
perceived silence of the international community because the
victims were Muslims might increase the dangers of an act of
jihadi terrorism before or during the Olympics either by
the Uighurs or by their co-religionists.
12. Meanwhile, the second
round of the resumed dialogue between Chinese officials and
two representatives of the Dalai Lama in Beijing in the
first week of July,2008, did not see any forward movement.
Though the Chinese agreed to a third round in October next,
the Dalai Lama's reprsentatives have come back with the
impression that there has been no change in the Chinese
position of refusing to discuss with the representatives of
the Dalai Lama their demand for genuine autonomy in Tibet.
They feel that the Chinese are just biding their time till
the Olympics are over and that once the games are over, the
Chinese will go after those in Tibet and other areas, who
continue to support the Dalai Lama.
13. The Chinese have been
firm that there is no question of any dialogue with the
Dalai Lama's representatives on the political set-up in
Tibet and on any political role for the Dalai Lama and that
the dialogue will be confined to the Dalai Lama's role as a
religious leader. According to them, the Tibetan diaspora
will not have any political role, which will be confined to
the Tibetan members of the Chinese Communist Party.
( The writer is
Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of
India,New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute For
Topical Studies, Chennai. He is also associated with the
Chennai Centre For China Studies. E-mail: seventyone2@gmail.com
)