COMMUNIST CHINA'S POLICY OF OPPRESSION IN EAST TURKESTAN
Автор: Harun Yahya ()
Дата публикации: 06/01/2004
Категория: Уйгуры
Версия для печати
COMMUNIST
CHINA'S CONTROL OVER
EAST TURKESTAN
As we have seen, there are many
economic reasons why East Turkestan is very important to China. That country's
interest in east Turkestan goes back thousands of years and the region has frequently
been occupied by China, either fully or in part.
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Mao saluting his army
after the communists had captured Beijing.
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The latest Chinese occupation,
that is still in existence today, began in the middle of the 1700s. The civil
conflicts in East Turkestan in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries not
only damaged popular unity, but also weakened the state itself. At the same
time, the Manchus came to power in China and the Manchu dynasty began. Throughout
their rule, East Turkestan was run by centrally appointed governors and
bureaucrats. In 1911 the Manchu Empire was overthrown and replaced by the
Chinese Republic under Sun Yat Sen, the leader of the Kuomintang party, and
East Turkestan was totally enslaved.
The cruelty inflicted on the
people of East Turkestan by the Kuomintang regime led to a popular uprising
and a declaration of independence in 1931. Up until then, the Muslims of East
Turkestan, aware of the political realities of the time, avoided any
initiatives aimed at securing independence. It was not only China that had
its sights set on the region, but Soviet Russia was also waiting for a chance
to take it over. The people of East Turkestan were aware of this (and of the
sufferings the Russians had inflicted on the Muslims of West Turkestan) and
for this reason preferred to accept the status quo rather than fall into
communist hands. However, the 1931 move towards independence left the Muslims
facing the very threat they had feared. China was able to put the movement
down only with help from Soviet Russia, and a large part of the region came
under Soviet control.
That interesting outcome was the
result of a number of developments: China realized that it would be unable to
quell the East Turkestan uprising on its own, and signed a secret agreement
with Soviet Russia. As a result it acquired weapons and troops from the
Russians. Despite this move, however, it still proved impossible to put the
uprising down. In 1933, the Red Army invaded East Turkestan by land and
defeated the Muslim forces. Following a number of battles in 1934-1937, East
Turkestan found itself under de facto Soviet rule. The savagery and
oppression inflicted on the peoples of the Soviet republics were now visited
on the Muslims of East Turkestan. The Red Army carried out mass killings,
tore down mosques, and even raped women.
With the outbreak of the Second
World War, the Russians withdrew their forces from East Turkestan. As the
nationalist Chinese government was defeated by Mao's communist guerillas in
various regions of the country, it fled to Formosa (Taiwan). China fell to
the communists, and East Turkestan with it.
Within the course of that process,
the people of East Turkestan once more made a bid for independence, and the
independent Republic of East Turkestan was declared in 1944, though it only
lasted until Mao took control of China in 1949.
THE
"RED" AGE IN EAST TURKESTAN
|
The communists slaughtered
thousands of innocent people during their take-over in China. |
The first communist government in
the world came to power in Russia. The Muslims of East Turkestan closely followed
the developments in West Turkestan (Kazakh, Uzbek, Kyrgyz, Turkmen and Tajik)
territories under Soviet domination, with which they shared common borders and
historical, religious, ethnic and cultural links. In particular, those such
as the late Isa Yusuf Alptekin (who served in West Turkestan and witnessed the
communist Russian oppression at first hand), warned both the Chinese government
and the Muslims of East Turkestan against the communist menace. It was a common
communist tactic to pay lip service to such concepts as equality, social justice
and the freedoms of nations until they came to power, at which time things change.
Equality would be replaced by the orders of the Politbureau, social justice
by exploitation, and freedoms by expulsions, torture, labor camps, and mass
executions.
Indeed, those same developments were experienced in East Turkestan. At the 7th
Congress in 1945, before coming to power, Mao declared that when the communists
did come to power, they would allow different ethnic groups to determine their
own futures and establish their own administrations.23 As soon as they came to power,
however, they ignored those promises and declared: "For two thousand
years Xinjiang has been an inalienable part of an indivisible China; therefore,
there would be no sense in dividing China into federated republics; this is
a demand hostile to history and socialism…"24
Cruelty and oppression followed.
First, the leaders of the Republic of East Turkestan were killed in a mysterious
plane crash on their way to a meeting with Chairman Mao. Later, the Red Chinese
government, which regarded East Turkestan as part of its own territory (and
was unwilling to let it go) set about a ruthless slaughter of the Muslim population.
The first war was waged against the Muslims' beliefs. Schools providing religious
instruction were closed, religious leaders were arrested, and the majority of
them were killed. Portraits of Mao and Communist Party flags were hung up in
mosques, and Muslims were ordered to show them due respect. Some Muslims were
arrested and executed on the pretext of being pan-Turkish, others of being pan-Islamic.
Another aspect of the repression was forced exile. Many Muslims who were forced
off their lands died en route because of the weather conditions. Between 1949
and 1952, 2.8 million East Turkestan Muslims were killed by various means. The
figure was 3.5 million between 1952 and 1957, 6.7 million between 1958 and 1960,
and 13.3 million between 1961 and 1965.
As the Muslims were being systematically
exterminated, Chinese were brought in to replace them in an attempt to prevent
Muslims' rightful claims to their own land. Another method employed by the Mao
regime, which wanted to turn East Turkestan into a province of China, was "family
planning" by means of forced abortions. This communist brutality, which
is still going on today, will be considered in more detail in subsequent chapters
of this book.
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Prominent Names In East Turkestan's Struggle For Freedom
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Isa
Yusuf Alptekin
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23. Lydia Holubnchy,
The East Turkic Review, No 4, 1960, Munich, p. 94
24. Ziya Samedi, Kommunizim Tugi, Almaty, March 18, 1979
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