Global Intelligence Update August 18, 1998
Chinese Flooding Provides Opportunity for Ethnic Separatist Action
The devastating floods in China have opened a window of opportunity for Muslim Uighur separatists in China's western Xinjiang region. Approximately one million soldiers, nearly one third of the People's Liberation Army (PLA), have been mobilized to battle the flooded Yangtze River. More than 100,000 additional soldiers are battling the Nenjiang River, which threatens China's northeastern Daqing oil fields. Additional Chinese security forces have been deployed in flood-ravaged regions to contain social unrest among the displaced populations. With much of China's military and political attention focused on the flooding, China's Uighur separatists have taken the opportunity to strike at government facilities in Xinjiang.
The Hong Kong-based Information Centre of Human Rights and Democratic Movement in China issued a press release on August 15, reporting that Uighur separatists had attacked targets in three cities on August 10. In one incident, the separatists reportedly killed eight members of the Public Security Bureau and the People's Armed Police in Kashgar, a major city near the border with Kyrgyzstan. In a second incident on the same day, separatists reportedly sprayed a police station at Kargilik, 300 kilometers southeast of Kashgar, with machine-gun fire. In yet a third incident, separatists stormed an arms depot in the Guma district, 100 kilometers from Kargilik. It is unknown whether there were any casualties from the Kargilik and Guma attacks.
Chinese officials have denied knowledge of the reported incidents, but Deutsche Presse-Agentur reported that an official at the Public Security Bureau headquarters in the Xinjiang capital of Urumqi had confirmed that Kashgar was under martial law. Uighur separatists were blamed for two bomb attacks on July 8 in the city of Khotan, during a visit to Xinjiang by Chinese President Jiang Zemin. President Jiang was in the region to urge local authorities to step up their campaign against the separatists. According to the South China Morning Post, there were several additional bombings during Jiang's visit, and police and military forces in the region were in a high state of alert. Regional heads of public security agencies met in Urumqi on August 3 to refocus their efforts on combating the separatists.
Xinjiang, a predominantly Muslim Uighur region, with ethnic Han Chinese making up only 37 percent of the population, has faced a growing separatist movement since 1996. A wave of violent demonstrations in February 1997 was followed by a government crackdown, in which thousands or tens of thousands of separatists (depending on the report) were arrested. According to security sources in Beijing, cited by the South China Morning Post, Xinjiang's pro-independence movement has escalated into an armed struggle due to "an influx of firearms into the western parts of the autonomous region." The sources claimed that clashes involving "heavy firearms" have taken place when authorities attempted to confiscate arms caches. Beijing has sought the assistance of Central Asian republics in stemming this arms traffic, but the Chinese government is worried that the Uighurs could find a new source of arms in the Taleban militia of Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Already facing economic difficulties and natural disasters, Beijing is also becoming acutely aware of the growing separatist threat in Xinjiang. China's official Press Digest reported on August 14 that three police had died in "ferocious clashes" in April and June of this year, and that Chinese should "learn from and salute the three heroes." The newspaper claimed the three "martyrs" had sacrificed their lives to defend "stability and prosperity in the western frontier of the motherland." In an effort to combat the threat, the Chinese Communist Party has established a new agency, the "Bureau for Maintenance of Social Stability," which has been tasked with collecting information on separatist movements, as well as underground political organizations, unemployed workers and peasants, and recently discharged soldiers. The bureau will reportedly work closely with the Ministry of State Security, the People's Armed Police, and elements of the Communist Party Central Committee.
President Jiang's visit to Xinjiang, which followed a visit to Central Asia in which he discussed anti-terrorism and anti-insurgency cooperation with the region's leaders, clearly marked what was to have been a major new campaign against the Uighur separatists. Further evidence of this can be seen in Beijing's decision to go ahead with a publicity campaign extolling Chinese to learn from the example of the police martyrs. The flooding has opened a window of opportunity to the separatists by delaying that campaign, and the delay may last for some time to come.
China will not be able to simple refocus attention in Xinjiang when the floods recede. If anything, China is only beginning to deal with the effects of the floods, which have already caused $24 billion in damages at last estimate. The social unrest stemming from dislocation, unemployment, and hunger resulting from the floods, compounded by China's already weakening economy, will occupy a major portion of the PLA and security forces throughout China for months. However, as the national crisis ebbs, or at least evolves in such a way as to allow the PLA to turn their attention once again to China's western frontier, the crackdown on separatists should resume with vigor. It still remains to be seen whether the exemplary tale of China's police martyrs in Xinjiang marks the beginning of a campaign in that region alone, or a broader campaign covering Tibet and dissidents throughout China.
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