Tengri alemlerni yaratqanda, biz uyghurlarni NURDIN apiride qilghan, Turan ziminlirigha hökümdarliq qilishqa buyrighan.Yer yüzidiki eng güzel we eng bay zimin bilen bizni tartuqlap, millitimizni hoquq we mal-dunyada riziqlandurghan.Hökümdarlirimiz uning iradisidin yüz örigechke sheherlirimiz qum astigha, seltenitimiz tarixqa kömülüp ketti.Uning yene bir pilani bar.U bizni paklawatidu,Uyghurlar yoqalmastur!

Sunday, January 13, 2008

THE UYGHURS


The Uyghur people are the indigenous and majority population living in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR) or what they correctly refer from a historical point of view as East Turkestan. The current territory of East Turkestan, or the XUAR under the PRC rule, is more than 1.6 million square kilometers and is bordering with Russia, Mongolia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India. It also borders in its east with China’s Gansu and Qinghai provinces as well as Tibet. Although the Uyghurs are considered a minority in China but they still remain the majority population in East Turkestan. Furthermore, they cannot be considered a minority group in comparison to other population groups in the world. The Uyghur population is one of the groups ranking within the 100 groups whose population exceeds more than one million. If there are 2,000 ethnic groups in the world, the Uyghurs are within the first 100. In fact the size of Uyghur population is bigger than many population groups who have independent states. For example, the size of Kyrgyz and Turkmen populations, although smaller than the Uyghur population, they both have independent states. The Uyghurs are not a minority in East Turkestan but have always been the absolute majority. According to latest Chinese statistics, the Uyghurs are still the majority in the XUAR. In 1949, the Uyghur population consisted of 78% of the total population in East Turkestan and together with other Turkic groups such Kazakhs, Kyrgyz, Tatars, and Uzbeks, consisted of 98% of the total population. The Chinese population was only 2% in 1949 but has become nearly half of the total population in the XUAR at this time and may soon even become the majority population. Although the 2002 Chinese statistics put the total number of Uyghurs into 8.2 million but Uyghur estimates are higher and up to 20 million. The Uyghurs are considered the fifth largest Turkic groups in Central Asia after Azers, Kazakhs, Turks and Uzbeks, with a long political history and civilization.

1. The Distribution of Uyghur Population

The majority Uyghur population live in East Turkestan and the rest live in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Russia. A small portion of the Uyghur population also lives in Mongolia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Turkey and Saudi Arabia.

a. Uyghur Diaspora in Central Asia

Today, majority of Uyghur diaspora lives in Central Asian states because East Turkestan is part of Central Asia and Uyghurs have close historical, ethnic, and cultural relations with the peoples there as well as geological oneness. According to official statistics from Central Asian states, the Uyghur population in Kazakhstan is 246,000, in Kyrgyzstan is 50,000, in Uzbekistan 39,000 and in Russia is around 3,000. But local Uyghur intellectuals believe that the actual number of Uyghur population in Central Asia is around 1 to 2 million and their number is reduced to what it is now for political reasons.During the 19th century, an estimated 300,000 Uyghurs living in Fergana Valley mixed with Uzbeks in that region. During the 18th and 19th centuries, many Uyghurs in the Ili and Kashgar regions fled to Central Asia as a result of Manchu suppression of Uyghur uprisings against the invading Qing army. Although later certain number of Uyghurs returned to East Turkestan to fight off the Manchu invaders but they had to flee again in 1877 after the defeat of Yakub Beg’s state of Kashgaria, and in 1881 after the Russians returned the Ili region to the Manchus according to “The Russian-Qing Agreement.?The Uyghur immigration to Central Asia has never stopped. In the early 20th century, there have been many waves of Uyghurs going to the then-Soviet Fergana Valley from Kashgaria and to the then-Soviet Yette Su region from the Ili Region to work in factories or do business, and finally settled there. Such waves of immigration increased the Uyghur population in the Soviet Central Asia in the early 20th century to 700,000 according to the Soviet statistics, but the number of Soviet Uyghurs dramatically decreased due to Stalin’s targeted purge of Uyghurs from 1937 to 1938, and due to the WWII from 1941 to 1945. Also, during 1950s and 1960s, there was a mass exodus of Uyghurs into the Soviet Central Asia but the exact number is unclear. Some estimates are up to 100,000. Most of them settled in the Kazakhstan Republic.During the Soviet era, the Uyghur culture was allowed to develop in Kazakhstan. In those years, the Soviet leadership offered Uyghurs in Central Asia certain privileges in order to take advantage of their geopolitical position in dealing with Communist China. In Kazakhstan alone, five different Uyghur newspapers were published; Uyghur bureau was established in every publishing house for printing Uyghur science and literature books and textbooks for Uyghur schools. In addition, more than 60 Uyghur schools were established and some universities also opened Uyghur offices/centers. There were both daily Uyghur radio and television broadcasting. And Uyghur Theater was quite active. However, such trends changed dramatically after Kazakhstan had become independent in 1991. Many of these programs were cut except the Uyghur schools. Today, Kazakhstan still remains to be the Central Asian country, comparatively better than both Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan, where the Uyghur culture is best preserved.The situation in Kyrgyzstan is quite different from Kazakhstan. Although there have never been Uyghur media or schools in this country, but Uyghurs have been able to successfully preserve their own ethnic identity and tradition. The Uyghur diaspora in Kyrgyzstan has always had a close relationship with the Uyghur diaspora in Kazakhstan. They are closely in touch through frequent visits, meetings and exchanges. Such exchanges have played a positive role in preserving the Uyghur culture and identity in Kyrgyzstan. In general, during the 1950s and 1960s, Uygurs from the Ili Region settled down in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, and Uyghurs from the Kashgar and Artush Regions settled down in Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. Although the Uyghurs local to Kyrgyzstan shared the same ethnicity with the Uyghur settlers from East Turkestan but they have preserved their own unique difference. In terms of ethnic assimilation of Uyghur communities in Central Asia, the most notable one is the Uyghur diaspora in Uzbekistan because of the close proximity of Uyghur-Uzbek languages, customs and traditions, etc. However, such trend is rare in both Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. Today, Kazakhstan is the country where the biggest Uyghur diaspora lives. But there is definite information with regard to the Uyghur communities in Tajikistan and Turkmenistan. But according to the Soviet statistics, there were more than 4,000 Uyghur residents in the Bayram Ali region of Turkmenistan some 20 years ago. After the collapse of the Soviet Union and the independence of the Central Asian states, Uyghurs living in these states began to promote and preserve Uyghur culture and identity, and even began to form political and cultural organizations aimed at linking their political future with those Uyghurs in East Turkestan. Initially, the Central Asian states allowed Uyghurs to form such organizations and even took advantage of them. But after the establishment of the Shanghai Five group in 1996, Central Asian states began to restrict Uyghur political activities in their respective territories in consideration of their diplomatic relations with China. After September 11, 2001, Central Asian states supported the Chinese efforts to fight against terrorism and restricted any kind of Uyghur political activism and warned Uyghurs not to interfere with China’s territorial integrity. They even dispatched Uyghur community leaders to China to establish ‘normal?relations with Beijing. In the past, the Uyghurs in Central Asia became a useful card for the Soviets to play against China. And again, Uyghurs became a card for the Central Asian states to play, this time, in favor of China.

b. Uyghur Diaspora in the West

The first Uyghurs reached the West, especially Europe through Russia, Turkey and India, in the early part of the 20th century. But there is no specific information on their resettlement there. During the 1970s, a lot of Uyghur began to immigrate to Western countries. In this period, some Uyghurs who had immigrated to Turkey from 1949 to 1960 began to immigrate to Germany as a result of employment. This is the beginning of Uyghur immigration in Western and Northern Europe. Around the same time period, some Uyghur immigrated to Australia. Although the first Uyghurs came to the U.S. in the 1950s but majority of them arrived after late 1980s. The number of Uyghur immigrants in the West dramatically increased after 2000 and is still growing. Today, an estimated 1,000 Uyghur Americans and Uyghurs with permanent legal resident status are living in the United States as students and employees. Both Radio Free Asia Uyghur Service and the Uyghur American Association based in Washington, DC became a magnet for other Uyghur immigrants to come and live in the U.S. capital. In Canada, Uyghur immigrants are spread mostly in three locations: Toronto, Vancouver and Quebec. Most Uyghurs living in Quebec came from Central Asia.At present, one could find Uyghurs in most European Union nations such as Germany, the Great Britain, Holland, Belgium, France, Switzerland, Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Finland. Uyghurs, who came to these countries for various reasons, are in two major groups: one came directly from East Turkestan and another from Central Asian states of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan. The Uyghurs who have immigrated to the West are second generation Uyghurs whose parents fled China during 1950s and 1960s to Central Asia.


2. Uyghur Language and Script

Uyghur language belongs to the Uyghur-Qarluq group within the family tree of Turkish languages in the Altai language system. The Uyghur language, together with more than 40 Turkic languages including Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Uzbek and Tartar share close affinity in morphology, syntax and phonetics. Among these languages, Uyghur and Uzbek are the closest two languages belonging in the same language group. The Uyghurs are one of the oldest Turkic groups that developed and used their own written script. The Uyghurs used Old Turkic runic script from 6th to 9th centuries. They used Uyghur script developed from the Soghdian script from 9th to 16th centuries. But the Uyghurs in Tarim Valley who accepted Islam began to use the Arabic script since the 10th century. This Uyghur Arabic script, modified many times over the centuries to today’s 32-letter system, has been used by all Uyghurs as official script to this day. The Uyghurs in the Soviet Central Asia used the Uyghur Latin script in the 1930s and began to use the Uyghur Cyrillic script in 1947. This Cyrillic script was recognized as the official Uyghur script in Kazakhstan for purposes of education, media and publication.

3. Religion

The Uyghur people believe in the Sunni Branch of Islam. Alghouth Islam reached Kasghar in the 8th century but it did not become the state religion of the Uyghur Qarahand Kingdom until the 10th century. Since then, Islam quickly spread and all Uyghurs became Muslims around the 15th century.Historically, the Uyghurs have believed in a number of religions, including Shamanism, Buddhism, Manichaeism, Christianity, and finally Islam. For about a thousand years, the Uyghurs have continued to believe in Islam. Buddhism initially came to Uyghurs in Hotan via India during the 2nd century B.C. Uyghur Buddhism centers such as Kuchar and Turfan played a pivotal role in spreading Buddhism to China. Prominent Uyghur Buddhist scholar Komorajiwa translated Buddhist scripts and philosophies into Chinese for their conversion. Uyghurs also believed in Manichaeism and Christianity before the advent of Islam. They played an active role in promoting and spreading these religions to their neighbors. From the 10th to 15th centuries, Buddhism, Manichaeism, Christianity and Islam peacefully coexisted among the Uyghur religious believers under the rule of Uyghur Idiqut Kingdom in Turfan. The Uyghurs believing all these different religions lived in peace, harmony, equality, and respected one another’s religious beliefs, creating a new culture. In the later period, Islam became the dominant religion over other religions, and was accepted by Uyghur tribes in both Turfan and Qumul regions. The tolerant rule of the Uyghur Idiqut Kingdom (867-1368) in Turfan is one of the most progressive rules of ancient times and paved a way of religious tolerance for later periods.After the first Uyghurs accepted Islam in the 10th century, it gradually spread and finally became the dominant religion among the Uyghurs. As Islam permeated into Uyghur heartlands, it played an important role in forming Uyghur spirituality, Uyghur social values, economic outlook and new Uyghur identity.

4. Culture, Literature and Art

The Uyghurs possess a rich folk and ethnographic culture. In terms of Uyghur food, dress, music, instruments and lifestyle, the Uyghurs belong to the Central Asian culture, which is completely different from the Chinese culture. Although East Turkestan is now officially part of the PRC but the Uyghurs are an inalienable part of the Turkic peoples in ethnicity, the Muslim world in religion, and the Central Asia in culture. It is true that at a later period the Uyghurs?traditional culture was to a certain extent influenced by the Chinese and Western cultures. In some ways, the Uyghur culture conformed to the modern Chinese culture but such conformation has not fundamentally changed the traditional Uyghur culture. Since the Uyghur culture is essentially a Central Asian culture, and the Chinese culture an Eastern culture, it is easer for the Uyghurs to accept the Central or Western Asian cultural values since they share the same ethnicity and religion. With the Russian conquest of Central Asia during the late 19th century, European social, economic, industrial and cultural influence began to permeate into this region. The Uyghurs, through the Ferghana Valley and the Yette Su region, began to come into contact with Russian and European cultures and goods. During this period, Turks, Tartars and Uzbek bourgeois as well as Uyghur capitalists played an important role in bringing European-style education for the Uyghurs and in enlightening them with new political ideologies. With the revolutionary changes in Russia during the late 19th and early 20th centuries and influx of Russian immigrants fleeing the Soviet communist rule into East Turkestan as well as the continuous Soviet influence in the region from 1930s to 1950s, modern Uyghur culture began to flourish intermingling with the European cultural values. In short, the Uyghur modern culture developed in East Turkestan not under the influence of the still minority Chinese culture but under the influence of Central Asian and Western cultures until the 1960s. Even today, the Western cultural influence still dominates the Uyghur cultural psyche. Historically, the Uyghurs have left a treasure house full of cultural relics. Throughout history, the Uyghurs have created their unique history, a classic literature and oral literature in comparison to other nomadic Turkic tribes. From the Uyghur Empire (A.D. 744-840) based in Mongolia to the Qarahand Uyghur Kingdom based in Kashgar (A.D. 9th century-1212) and to the Idiqut Kingdom based in Turfan (A.D. 867-1368), the Uyghurs using ancient Runic script, Uyghur script and later Arab script left volumes upon volumes of scripts and writings on Buddhism, Manichaeism, Christianity and Islam as well as political, social, legal and literature works. The early Middle Ages can be considered the Golden Age of Uyghur civilization in Central Asia. During the 11th century, prominent Uyghur scholar Mahmud Kashgari wrote the renowned “Turkic Languages Encyclopedia?and famous Uyghur statesman Yusuf Has Hajip penned the book on statecraft “Qutatqu Bilik.?Around the same time, the epic “Oghuzname?appeared in the Turfan region and other poetry and translated works such as “Altun Yaruq,?“Matriy Simit?and “The Biography of Xunzang?became the representative works of the time. The Uyghurs, during the Mongol rule of Chingiz Khan and his descendents, used the Uyghur-Turkic Chaghatay Language and created valuable cultural relics and literature works. This Uyghur language, containing many borrowed Arab and Farsi loan words, became the main literary language of Turkic peoples in Central Asia from the 14th to 19th centuries. Renowned Uyghur poets such as Nawayi (1441-1501), Lutfi (1366-1465), Sekkaki (1468-?), Atayi (15th century), Hirqiti (17th century), Gheribi (18th century), Zelili (1676-1755), Newbeti (1691-1760?), Abdureyim Nizari (1779-1880), Molla Shakir (1805-1870), and Bilal Nazim (1824-1899) became the Uyghur literature stars who developed the modern Uyghur literature based on the ancient Kashgar-Turfan literature heritage. In other words, modern Uyghur literature is the continuation of ancient Uyghur literary traditions. The Uyghur classic literature in different ages has been under the tremendous influence of different religious beliefs and other factors such as Sanskrit, Farsi and Arab culture. Although the Chinese scholars attempt to prove that Uyghur classic literature was developed under the strong influence of Chinese culture but in fact there is little or no evidence that it was the case and such proposition has been rejected.In addition, the Uyghurs also developed different prose-style poetry in the 18th and 19th centuries and recorded historical events with epic poetries. These epic poetries recorded the conversion of Qarahand King Sultan Sutuq to Islam in the 10th century, the history of the Yarkand Kingdom (1514-1678), the Ages of Hojas (1678-1759) and the events related to the struggle against the Manchu invasion, including battles of Kashgar King Yaqup Beg, the Rashidin Hoja uprising in Kuchar and the actions of Uyghur Taranchi in Ili region. The representative examples of such epic poetry are the works of Muhammed Sadiq Kashgari (1725-1849), Mollah Haji (19th century), and Mollah Musa Sayrami (1836-1917). Today, there are more than 400 manuscripts of ancient Uyghur epic poetries preserved in the Asian Museum of the Saint Petersburg in Russia. Others are available at the museums and research institutes in Urumchi, Beijing, Tashkent, and Moscow. The Uyghurs created the modern Uyghur literature in the 20th century. The Uyghur writers and poets using different writing styles and forms made unprecedented progress in writing epic poetries, prose and even drama. The modern Uyghur literature is a complete system of literature developed partly in the Uyghur literature centers of Alma-Ata and Tashkent in the 1930s. The Uyghur writers in the Soviet Central Asia, such as Omer Muhammedi, Hezim Iskendirof, and Momun Hemrayef, made tremendous contribution to the formation of modern Uyghur literature. In East Turkestan, Abduhaliq Uyghuri, Lutfulla Mutellip, Zunun Qadir, abdurehim Otkur, Ziya Semedi, Teyipjan Eliyof and Zordun Sabir are considered the forefathers of modern Uyghur literature. Although the modern Uyghur literature was developed in both East Turkestan and the Soviet Central Asia, and could even be divided into two separate literatures, but they are in fact one because they shared the same theme, content and styles. The historic Uyghur art of paining is quite unique in style and highly developed. The Buddhist paintings in the grottoes of Turfan and Kuchar are the best representatives of Uyghur classical paintings. At present, the Kuchar Grottoes paintings are quite well preserved in abundance. The Uyghur Buddhist paintings have a long history and lasted until the 13th century in Turfan area. After Islam became the dominant religion of Uyghurs, the Uyghur grottoes paintings practically ceased. Although some miniature paintings appeared in the Middle Ages but they didn’t develop any further than the art of painting in Central Asia. Today, Uyghur painters in both East Turkestan and Central Asian states have been able to successfully create unique paintings in the realist, abstract and French styles. The best examples can be Ghazi Amat and Kerim Nasirdin from East Turkestan; Lekim Ibrayimof form Uzbekistan; Azat Mamadinof from Russia; Ahat Baqiyev from Kazakhstan and Telet Mirrahimof from Kyrgyzstan. There are currently more than 100 well-known Uyghur painters in East Turkestan and Central Asia, and Ghazi Amat is considered the father of modern Uyghur painting. The Uyghurs cannot live with their music and songs. The Uyghurs have a very unique musical culture with “Uyghur Twelve Muqam?representing the most systematic Uyghur classical music. Although different Uyghur regions have their own special dance and music but all of them use the same musical instruments, such as satar, ghejek, tambur, dutar, rawap, flute and drum. Uyghur songs, divided by regions, have their peculiar regional tones special to each region. As a result, Uyghur dance and music in Kuchar, Kashgar, Artush, Turfan, Qumul and Ili are somewhat different. Uyghur singers Tudahum, Pasha Ishan, Abdureyim Ahmedi and others are famous for singing Uyghur muqams and folk songs. According to Chinese historical sources, Uyghur people living in the Tarim Basin from the 7th to the 13th centuries developed a high culture of music, dancing and singing. During the 10th century, Chinese visitor Wang Yende recorded that Uyghurs living in the Turfan Iduqut Kingdom carried with them musical instruments everywhere. Uyghurs not only developed their own style of singing, dancing and playing music throughout history. They have also adopted many Western style of singing, dancing and playing music in recent years, enriching the Uyghur musical culture to another step.

5. Historical Identity

The Uyghurs are one of the oldest Turkic peoples in Central Asia. According to historical Chinese record, they have direct blood relations with the ancient Huns and even considered their descendents. Russian historian A. N. Bernishtam believes that the Uyghur people have historically lived in East Turkestan, Mongolia and Yette Su region, and they are the indigenous to East Turkestan. The Uyghurs established the Qanqil Kingdom during the 5th and 6th centuries in the Tarim Basin and the eastern part of the Tagnri Mountains (Tianshan Mountain), and became part of the Kok Turk Empire in the 7th century. The Uyghurs in Mongolia established their own state in the 7th century. In 744, the Uyghurs established a powerful Uyghur State based in Mongolia ruling East Turkestan, Yette Su region, southern Siberia and Altai region including all Turkic, Mongol and even Tonghus-Manchu languages speaking peoples. According to prominent China scholar Colin Mackeras, the Uyghurs actually established an empire called the “Uyghur Empire.? During the 8th and 9th centuries, the Uyghur Empire became the co-equal of China’s Tang Dynasty and the Tibetan Kingdom and in many ways was more powerful than both. The Uyghur Empire played a critical role in suppressing the An Lushan Uprising against the Tang Dynasty, which almost overthrew it, and in saving the weak Chinese state. As a result, the Tang Dynasty became a subordinate of the Uyghur Empire and began to pay annual tributes to the Uyghurs. After the fall of the Uyghur Empire in Mongolia in 840, Uyghurs moved in five directions. Most Uyghur tribes based in the empire capital of Karabalghasun moved to today’s Gansu province and East Turkestan, and mixed with the local Uyghur and Turkic tribes. Later they established the Turfan Idiqut Kingdom (867-1368), Ganzhou Uyghur Kingdom (847-1036) and the Qarahand Kingdom (9th century to 1212). Although some Chinese scholars attempt to describe that Uyghurs moved into East Turkestan for the first time only after the fall of the Uyghur Empire in Mongolia, but other prominent Chinese scholars such as Feng Jasheng, Gu Bao, and Chen Sulo rejected such proposition by stating that Uyghurs lived in East Turketan long before the fall of their empire. Gu Bao believes that most Uyghurs at the time of the fall of the Uyghur Empire lived in the Tarim-Turfan basin area and only a minority of Uyghurs from Mongolia moved into this area after the fall. Bao asserts that Uyghurs have always been the indigenous population of East Turkestan. In addition, Russian scholar A. N. Bernishtam, D.I. Tihonof, D. Pozdneyev and V. Radlov as well as the Japanese scholar Abe Takeo and Turkish scholars Bahayiddin Oge and Zeki Welidi Toghan believe that the Uyghurs are one of the most ancient Turkic peoples indigenous to today’s East Turkestan. Furthermore, Uyhgur historians Muhammed Imin Bughra (1901-1965), Turghun Almas (1921-2001), Dawut Issiyef (1937-1996) and Malik Kebirof confirm that East Turkestan has always been the motherland of the Uyghur people, the Uyghurs who had moved to the Orhun Basin (Mongolia) were only belonging to the eastern Uyghur tribes who later established the Uyghur Empire in Mongolia. They believe that these eastern Uyghur tribes moved back to East Turkestan area after the fall of the empire and later played a significant role in keeping the historic motherland of Uyghurs independent until the Manchu armies invaded in 1759. During the 12th and 13th centuries, there had been great changes taking place in Central Asia. In 1206, Chingiz Khan established a Mongol Dynasty after conquering Mongol factions and neighboring Turkic tribes. Since the Uyghur Kingdom in Turfan recognized the Mongol Kingdom as one of the first states, the Uyghurs developed a friendly relation with the Mongol Empire. As a result such close ally relationship, Chingiz Khan offered his daughter to marry the Uyghur King and even called him his “fifth son.?Chingiz Khan also adopted the Uyghur script as the official script of the Mongol Empire and hired Uyghur military commanders and scribes to serve his army and educate his people. In general, the Uyghurs played a very important role during the Mongol Empire period in its administration of Persia, Central Asia and China. During the rule of Chingiz Khan’s son Kublai Khan (1279-1368) in China, the Uyghurs were given a position just below the ruling Mongols in light of their tremendous contribution to the empire. The Uyghurs were given such a high position as a result of their advanced culture and loyalty to the empire. During the 13th and 14th centuries, the Uyghurs lived under the Chaghatay rule. During the 16th century, the Uyghurs in Tarim Basin established the Saidiye Kingdom in Yarkand, ruling the areas including East Turkestan, Yette Su region, parts of Tibet and Kashmir. Although during the 17th and 18th centuries, the Uyghurs were under the strong influence of the Junghar Mongol influence and even paid taxes to them, but they were mostly left alone to rule themselves under the Uyghur Hojas. In 1759, the Manchu Qing Dynasty invaded the Tarim Basin but faced fierce resistance from the Uyghurs. As a result, the Manchus were never able to successfully control East Turkestan. In fact, the Manchu rule in East Turkestan was overthrown in 1864. After that, Uyghurs established the Kashgaria Uyghur Kingdom (1865-1878) in the south and the Ili Sultanate (1864-1871) in the north, freeing them from foreign subjugation.

The Kashgaria Kingdom later became the focal point of power struggle between great powers such as the Great Britain, Russia and the Manchu Qing Dynasty, which is called the “Great Game.?As a result of this great game, both Russia and the Great Britain allowed the Manchus to reoccupy East Turkestan. In 1878, the Manchu armies led by General Zo Zongtang invaded East Turkestan and established the Manchu rule. In 1884, the Manchus changed East Turkestan into “Xinjiang,?meaning “New Territory,?and designated it as a province. In other words, the name “Xinjiang?has only been used for 113 years. Before that, the Chinese called this region as “Xiyu?or “Western Region?and some even called “Huijiang?meaning ?the Territory of Muslims.?Although the Manchus used Xinjiang to name East Turkestan but the local Uyghur population was not aware of such name changes so continuously used the words “East Turkestan,?“Turkestan?or the oases names of their own towns. In 1912, after the Chinese revolution that overthrew the Manchu Qin Dynasty and the establishment of the Chinese Republic, the Uyghurs in Qumul region revolted against the Chinese rule but failed. After that Chinese governor Yang Zengxing ruled East Turkestan for 17 years enforcing a policy of “divide and conquer, and keep locals backward.?Although he was one of the most cunning early Chinese rulers in East Turkestan but he died in the hands of others. In 1931, the Uyghurs in Qumul staged another large scale uprising against the Chinese rule and the Uyghurs along with other Turkic groups such as Kazakhs and Kyrgys as well as Mongols controlled all areas of East Turkestan except Urumchi in 1934.

On November 12, 1933 the Uyghurs declared their independence by establishing the East Turkestan Islamic Republic and announced that they were the masters of East Turkestan. This republic, established on democratic principles, had its own constitution, national flag, national emblem and money. By declaring a democratic rule and abolishment of Chinese rule, this new republic adopted both foreign and domestic policies. However, in 1934, the Soviet Union established the Xinjiang Research Office led by Voroshilov to assess the situation in East Turkestan and the roles of the Great Britain and Japan in the region. This office later recommended to the Soviet government that Moscow should support the Chinese militarist Shen Shicai’s rule in East Turkestan instead of recognizing the newly independent Uyghur state because that would serve Moscow’s long-term political interest in creating the region as a buffer zone and in opposing the British, Japanese and Islamic challenges in the region. As a result, the Soviets sent its red army and crushed the Uyghur state, solidified the Chinese militarist rule in the region, prevented Chinese Nationalist army to enter the region, blocked the pathway to East Turkestan for seven years and later deployed a block of red army near the border. After Sheng Shicai solidified his power, and especially after the Nazi Germans invaded the Soviet Union in 1941, he betrayed Moscow and allied with Chinese Nationalists. He allowed the entry of the Chinese Nationalist Army into East Turkestan.

In 1943, the Chinese Nationalist Government allowed the U.S. and the Great Britain to establish their consulates in Urumchi in order to put further pressure on the Soviets. Since then, Stalin realized his betrayal and began to support the Uyghur independence and prevent an American and British foothold in the region in order to take his revenge against Shen Shicai and the Chinese Nationalists. During his 13-year rule, Shen Shicai murdered more than 100,000 Uyghurs and other Turkic people under all kinds of false political and criminal charges, enraging them and inspiring them to seek independence. As a result, starting in 1943 Uyghur and Kazakhs began to form underground political organizations against rule of china. In September 1944, Uyghurs in the Ili region armed themselves and fought against Chinese rule. On November 12, just three months later, they declared the independence of the East Turkestan Republic. This new republic received military, political, and financial support from the Soviet Union. The Soviets also provided all kinds of advisers. In its 9-point declaration, the East Turkestan Republic declared an independent republic that would treat all religions and peoples equally by embracing democracy and rejecting totalitarianism.

On April 8, 1945 the East Turkestan Republic established its standing army and fought against the Chinese Nationalist forces in three fronts and liberated 26 counties in Ili, Altay and Tarbaghatay regions as well as 6 counties in Kashgar and Aksu regions. The Uyghur struggle for independence became nationwide and the Chinese Nationalist government in Urumchi was about to be crushed. At such a critical time, Stalin forced the East Turkestan leadership to compromise and negotiate with the Chinese Nationalist government. After nearly eight months of negotiation under intense pressure from Moscow, a coalition government was established for the Uyghurs and Chinese to share political powers. But the coalition government collapsed within a year and the East Turkestan army resumed fighting against the Chinese forces and stopped at the Manas River. This river became the unofficial border between two sides until November 1949.

The democratic East Turkestan Republic, consisted of Ili, Altai and Tarbaghatay regions, was loved by all the ethnic groups living in those regions. The reason is that all peoples including the Uyghurs, Kazakhs, Kyrgyz, Tartars, Tajiks, Tunggan and Uzbeks believing in Islam, Russians believing in Christianity, Mongols believing in Lamaism, and Shibo and Daur believing in Shamanism fought together for their freedom and this republic. They all supported and created the independence of East Turkestan. Although some Chinese historians try to portray this independence republic as established under the influence of pan-Turkism and pan-Islamism but such views are not in line with history. One of the main reasons for Moscow to stop supporting the East Turkestan Republic and forcing its leaders to negotiate with the Chinese Nationalist government was the agreement made at the Yalta Conference held on February 11, 1945, in which the Soviets signed a friendship treaty with the Chinese Nationalists after the Russian interests in Mongolia and Manchuria guaranteed, the Russian decided to join the war against Japan to end the WWII and determine the post-war order.

In accordance with the Yalta Agreement, the Soviet-Chinese negotiation started in June 1945 and ended in August after the Chinese Nationalist government guaranteed the Russian interest in Mongolia and Manchuria. In these negotiations, Chinese Nationalist leader Jiang Jieshi demanded from Stalin that Moscow not support the East Turkestan independence and provide weapons. Moscow assured Jiang that the Soviets had no territorial interest in Xinjiang. In short, both Russian and Western historian believe that the East Turkestan Republic became a ‘strategic pawn?of power politics and the Uyghur people’s struggle for freedom and independence was betrayed by political intrigues of great powers. In late 1949, Stalin decided to support Mao Zedong’s communist revolution due to the political situation in China and the necessity of emerging Cold War. During his secret visit to Moscow in July 1947, Liu Shaoqi not only talked about the political system after the communist revolution but also the Xinjiang problem. Liu reiterated to the Soviet leadership that Xinjiang was part of China. According to Uyghur historic witness accounts, Stalin sent Seyfidin Aziz as a figurehead of the East Turkestan Republic to Beijing to attend the founding ceremony of the People’s Republic of China in October 1949 after East Turkestan President Ahmatjan Qasimi and other high-level ministers had refused to accept Stalin’s proposal that East Turkestan should be under Chinese communist rule and died in an alleged plane crash on their way to Beijing as a result of their refusal. Furthermore, the Soviets played an active role in persuading remaining Chinese Nationalist forces to surrender to the incoming Chinese red army, which was airlifted by the Soviet transport planes to accelerate the occupation of East Turkestan. With the full support of the Soviet Union, the Chinese red army was able to enter and occupy East Turkestan by November 1949 and start a new and dark political chapter. Mao Zedong, when commenting on the independent East Turkestan, said “The Three-Region Struggle is part of China’s new democratic struggle,?implying that it was not fought for Uyghur independence. The East Turkestan people and army were able to learn of the death of their president Ahmatjan Qasimi and others three months after their death because Moscow and Beijing had kept it as the ultimate secret. Since then it was forbidden to fly the flag of the East Turkestan Republic and sing songs about the independence of East Turkestan. Only the Chinese flag was allowed to fly and the East Turkestan army was incorporated as the fifth corps of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army. During this period in December 1949, a Chinese delegation led by Mao Zedong visited Moscow. After three months of negotiation, in February 1950 the “Sino-Soviet Friendsip and Cooperation Agreement?was signed. There were two clauses directly related to mining in East Turkestan and signed by Seyfidin Aziz, former education minister of the East Turkestan Republic who replaced the murdered president Ahmatjan Qasimi. After everything was completed according to the wishes of Stalin and Mao Zedong, in March 1950 the death of Ahmatjan Qasimi and other high-level Uyghur officials were declared and their bodies sent back to Ghulja City for burial. In October 1955, East Turkestan was declared the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. Since 1949, the Uyghur people became only one of the 55 minority nationalities in China and suffered unprecedented repression at the hands of the Chinese government. Such heavy-handed repression, in addition to earlier Chinese rule, resulted the death of hundreds of thousands of Uyghurs. Historians calculated more than 400 large-scale uprising against foreign rule by the Uyghur since the Manchu Qing Dynasty invaded East Turkestan. There have been many uprisings against the communist Chinese rule as well since 1949. If the Uyghur people were indeed “liberated?as the Chinese government claims, then why would they continue to stage uprisings against their rule? If they were indeed liberated, the situation would not be as complicated as today. And the international community would not have noticed the problems either.

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Aryans: Culture Bearers to China















Mark Deavin


In July 1996 two students wading in the Columbia River at Kennewick, Washington, stumbled across the skeletal remains of a middle-aged European male. At first anthropologists presumed they had discovered a pioneer who had died in the late 1800's. But radiocarbon dating subsequently showed that the skeleton was a remarkable 9,300 years old. In fact, "Kennewick Man" is the latest in a series of ancient skeletal discoveries which are giving rise to the theory that some of the earliest inhabitants of North America were Europeans who migrated from the Eurasian continent via a land bridge in the Bering Sea near the end of the last Ice Age, about 12,000 years ago. Dr. Robert Bonnischen, director of the Center for the Study of the First Americans at Oregon State University, believes that "Kennewick Man" helps cast doubt on the accuracy of the term "paleo-Indian," which is usually used to describe this period of American prehistory. "Maybe some of these guys were really just paleo-American," he admits.

Uyghur Imperie
Of course, such facts pose a major challenge to the Politically Correct version of history, which promotes the idea that White Americans shamefully stole their country from its supposed Indian owners. Not surprisingly, therefore, attempts have been made to prevent the facts about "Kennewick Man" from being made public. Encouraged by the Clinton government, American Indians have made a claim on the skeleton using a 1990 Federal law intended to protect their grave sites. Their declared intention is to bury it immediately in a secret location and prevent further scientific examination and DNA testing. However, eight U.S. anthropologists, who claim that the Indians and the Federal government fear the implications of the discovery, began a legal battle in October 1996 to prevent the secret burial from taking place.


In fact, "Kennewick Man" is an important addition to the growing body of evidence which suggests that during the period of the Upper Paleolithic, between about 10,000 and 35,000 years ago, Whites — i.e., men indistinguishable from modern Europeans — lived not only in Europe, but also in a band stretching across northern Asia to the Pacific. In Siberia and other eastern regions they were eventually displaced and absorbed by Mongoloid peoples, although isolated pockets of European genes have survived in northern Asia until this day. The mixed-race Ainu people of Japan are an example.
The credibility of this theory has been dramatically strengthened in recent years by the remarkable discovery of more than 100 naturally mummified European corpses, ranging from 2,400 to 4,000 years old, in the Tarim Basin region of western China. Amazingly well preserved by the arid climate in the area, the mummies give evidence of a Nordic people with an advanced culture, splendidly attired in colorful robes, trousers, boots, stockings, coats, and hats. In one large tomb the corpses of three women and one man were discovered. The man, about 55 years old at death, was about six feet tall and had yellowish brown hair that was turning white. One of the better preserved women was close to six feet tall, with yellowish-brown hair dressed in braids. [Image: Xinjiang (Chinese Turkestan), largest province in China, site of the Tarim Basin mummies.]
Items found with the bodies included fur coats, leather mittens, and an ornamental mirror, while the woman also held bags containing small knives and herbs, probably for use as medicines. At Cherchen, on the southern edge of the Taklamakan Desert, the mummified corpse of an infant was found, probably no more than three months old at the time of death, wrapped in brown wool and with its eyes covered with small, flat stones. Next to the head was a drinking cup made from a bovine horn and an ancient "baby bottle" made from a sheep's teat that had been cut and sewn so it could hold milk. One male mummy even had traces of a surgical operation on his neck, with the incision being sewn up with horsehair stitches. [Image: Tall, blond European, buried 3,000 years ago in western China. The mummified bodies of dozens of his kinsmen have been disinterred in the same area.]




Several European mummies had in fact already been found in the Tarim Basin area early in this century, one of which was reminiscent of a Welsh or Irish woman, and another of a Bohemian burgher. All were dressed in fine clothing, including jaunty caps with feathers stuck in them that bore a striking resemblance to alpine headgear still worn in western Europe today. But these earlier discoveries, not much more than 2,000 years old, were dismissed as the bodies of isolated Europeans who had happened to stray into the territory and so were regarded as being of no cultural or historical significance.
Indeed, modern scholars, attuned to Politically Correct historical fashion, have tended to downplay evidence of any early trade or contact between China and the West during this period, regarding the development of Chinese civilization as an essentially homegrown affair sealed off from outside influences. Any diffusion of people and culture, moreover, was held to have been from east to west, with the Europeans being civilized by the Chinese. The very eminent prehistorian Gordon Childe, for example, in 1958 summed up European prehistory as being the story of "the irradiation of European barbarism by Oriental civilization. [1]



But the latest mummy finds in the Tarim Basin region are too numerous, too ancient, and too revealing to dismiss in this way. Most important, they have helped to reopen the debate about the role which Europeans played in the origins of civilization in China, with some archeologists again beginning to argue that Europeans might have been responsible for introducing into China such basic items as the wheel and the first metal objects. This is actually reaffirming theories that were advocated at the beginning of the century, but which were subsequently buried in an avalanche of Political Correctness. In 1912, for example, the distinguished Cambridge scholar A.C. Haddon noted in The Wanderings of Peoples the possibility that the progressive element of the old Chinese civilization was due to the migration of a semi-cultured people from the west.

Now, according to Dr. Han Kangxin, a physical anthropologist at the Institute of Archeology in Beijing, the skeletal and mummified evidence clearly points to the fact that the earliest inhabitants of the Tarim Basin region were White people related to the Cro-Magnons of Paleolithic Europe. This theory is supported by Dr. Victor Mair, a specialist in ancient Asian languages and cultures at the University of Pennsylvania, who stimulated the major search which found the mummies. He has emerged as the main advocate of the theory that large groups of Europeans were present in the Tarim Basin long before the area's present inhabitants, suggesting that Turkic speakers did not move into the area until about the eighth century B.C. Subsequently, he believes, the newcomers displaced the Europeans, although the major ethnic group in the area today, the Uygur, includes people with unusually fair hair and complexions.



Actually, evidence of a now-extinct Indo-European people who lived in central Asia has long existed. Known as Tocharians, they are described more accurately as Arsi, which is cognate with Sanskrit arya and Old Persian ariya, meaning "Aryan": "that which is noble or worthy." Their language, which has similarities to the Celtic and Germanic branches of the Indo-European tree, is recorded in manuscripts dated between the sixth and eighth centuries A.D., and solid evidence for its existence can be found as far back as the third century.



Despite the fact that Tocharian manuscripts are found only for the later period, linguists have isolated occasional Tocharian words embedded in manuscripts written in Gandhari Prakrit, a northwest Indian vernacular that served as the administrative language for large parts of the Tarim Basin during the third through the fifth centuries. Also, the Tocharians were earlier known as the Yuezhi (or Ruzhi), to whom references occur in Chinese texts as early as the fifth century B.C., within the time frame of the Tarim Basin mummies.



The Tocharians are vividly displayed in ancient wall paintings at Kizil and Kumtura (near the modern Chinese city K'u-ch'e, in the Tien Shan Mountains north of the Tarim Basin) as aristocratic Europeans, with red or blond hair parted neatly in the middle, long noses, blue or green eyes set in narrow faces, and tall bodies. The Yuezhi from the first century B.C. also are depicted in striking painted statues at Khalchayan (west of the Surkhan River in ancient Bactria). They too are shown to be Europeans with long noses, thin faces, blond hair, pink skin, and bright blue eyes. It is known from historical sources that during the second century B.C. the Greater Yuezhi moved from northwest China to Ferghana and Bactria, which lie on the far side of the Pamirs. From there they moved south across the Hindu Kush into Afghanistan and the northern part of the Indian subcontinent, where they founded the mighty Kushan empire. The latter, in turn, extended its power back into the Tarim Basin and with it spread Buddhism, which eventually reached China.




"The new finds are also forcing a reexamination of old Chinese books that describe historical or legendary figures of great height, with deep-set blue or green eyes, long noses, full beards, and red or blond hair. Scholars have traditionally scoffed at these accounts, but it now seems that they may be accurate." (Victor Mair)



One hypothesis gaining increasing support is that the migration of these Indo-Europeans began with their invention of wheeled wagons. Working with Russian archeologists, Dr. David W. Anthony, an anthropologist at Hartwick College in New York, has discovered traces of wagon wheels in 5,000-year-old burial mounds on the steppes of southern Russia and Kazakhstan. This line of investigation has a direct bearing on the question of the European mummies in China because tripartite disk wheels similar in construction to those found in western Asia and Europe during the third and second millennium B.C. have been found in the Gobi Desert, northeast of the Tarim Basin. Similarly, spoked wheels dating to the early second millennium B.C. have been unearthed at a site nearby.


Most researchers now agree that the birthplace of horse-drawn vehicles and horse riding was in the steppes of Ukraine, rather than in China or the Near East. As Dr. Anthony and his colleagues have shown through microscopic study of ancient horse teeth, horses already were being harnessed in Ukraine 6,000 years ago. Also, wooden chariots with elaborate, spoked wheels have been shown to date to around 2,000 B.C. in the same area. In comparison, chariots do not appear in China until some 800 years later. Ritual horse burials similar to those in ancient Ukraine also have been excavated in the Tarim Basin, as well as remains of wagon wheels made by doweling together three carved, parallel wooden planks. Wagons with nearly identical wheels are known from the grassy plains of Ukraine as far back as 3,000 B.C.



A number of artifacts recovered from the Tarim Basin mummy burials have provided important evidence for early horse riding. These include a wooden bit and leather reins, a horse whip consisting of a single strip of leather attached to a wooden handle, a wooden cheek piece with leather straps, and a padded leather saddle of exquisite workmanship. This seems to confirm that the mummies belonged to a mobile, horse-riding culture that spread from the plains of eastern Europe. It also supports the growing belief of archeologists that the spread of Indo-European genes, culture, and language may be linked to the gradual spread of horse riding and the technology of horse-drawn vehicles from their origins in Europe 6,000 years ago.


These discoveries have extremely important consequences for understanding the origins of Chinese civilization, since the chariot has now been demonstrated to have entered China only around the middle of the second millennium B.C., at roughly the same time that bronze metallurgy and writing developed there. The evidence suggests, therefore, that wagons and chariots were introduced into China from the west by Indo-Europeans. It also shows that the European penetration of China did not begin with the opening of the transcontinental Silk Road trade route that history books usually place in the second century B.C., but at least 2,000 years earlier at the turn of the Neolithic and Bronze Ages, when the whole of Eurasia became culturally and technologically interconnected by migrating Europeans.



Waves of migration over a period of at least 7,000 years (8,000 B.C.-1,000 B.C.) carried Aryans from a homeland north of the Black Sea into western Europe, northern India, western China, and North America (via the Bering Strait).



Actually, as early as 1951 the German archeologist Robert Heine-Geldern sought to show a series of similarities between the metalwork of Europe and China around 800 B.C. His evidence included horse gear, two-edged swords, socketed axes, and spearheads, which he believed originated in the Hallstatt and Caucasus metallurgical centers. Arguing that a "Pontic Migration" had taken place from Europe across Asia, he suggested that the Dongson culture of south China could best be explained as the result of influences carried directly from Europe during the 9th and 8th centuries B.C. [2]


Two years later the well known Russian archeologist S. I. Rudenko noted the existence of mummies with European features in the royal tombs of Pazyryk in the Altai mountains, dated to the 5th and 4th centuries B.C. This evidence was subsequently added to by John Haskins of the University of Pittsburgh, who argued that the Yueh-chih (an ancient Chinese name for the Tocharians) of the Pazyryk region of the Altai might have been related to the Celts of continental Europe.

Significantly, the Tarim Basin mummies have provided further evidence which supports Heine-Geldern's theory. Some of the grave goods found with the mummies strongly suggest a connection with the "socketed celt horizon," typified by socketed bronze celts (axes which have bent wooden handles inserted at the end opposite the blade) and other distinctive bronze objects, such as knives with zoomorphic handles. The "socketed celt horizon" is dated roughly 1,800 to 1,000 B.C. stretching across Europe and correlates well with certain facets of a horse-riding and chariot/cart culture which emphasized hunting with composite bows and perhaps crossbows.


Thus, new credence has been given to previously ignored and ridiculed theories for the origins and development of civilization in China. In light of the new evidence, Edwin Pulleyblank of the University of British Columbia recently argued that European influence may have been an important factor in the unification of the Chinese states and the establishment of the first centralized Chinese empire by Ch'in Shih Huang Ti in the year 221 B.C. He points to the external arrival on the Chinese steppe frontier of the military technique of mounted archery, first explicitly mentioned in Chinese sources in the year 307 B.C. In the west mounted archery appears with the Scythians, closely related to the Celts, who are first mentioned in Near Eastern sources around 800 B.C. and whose way of life is described at length by the Greek historian Herodotus. Ironically, it was the technique of mounted archery that defined the classic nomadism that dominated the European steppe and made possible the great steppe empires of the Xiongnu, the Turks, and the Mongols that later terrorized Europe.


Pulleyblank effectively suggests that European technology was copied by the Chinese and turned against its original inventors. Indeed, a suggestive analogy to the spread of mounted archery eastward to the borders of China can be seen in the way in which the acquisition of horses by the Indians from the Spaniards in Mexico and their use in warfare transformed the Great Plains of North America from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries. This theory of Mongoloid imitation is also reflected in the many words of Indo-European origin in the earliest known layers of Sinitic languages. These include words for "horse," "track," "cart," "wheel," and "cow" and suggest further that it was Europeans who brought these things into China.

Textile samples from the late second millennium B.C. found in the Tarim Basin graves also provide evidence of the diffusion of European technological sophistication to China. One fragment was a wool twill woven with a plaid design which required looms that have never before been associated with China or eastern Central Asia at such an early date. Irene Good, a specialist in textile archeology at the University of Pennsylvania, has confirmed that the plaid fabric was virtually identical stylistically and technically to textile fragments found in Austria and Germany at sites from a somewhat later period.



Dr. Elizabeth J.W. Barber, a linguist and archeologist at Occidental College in Los Angeles and the author of Prehistoric Textiles (Princeton University Press, 1991), confirms that the Chinese did not use and did not even know twill, but obtained knowledge of the weave from the West, and only after the Han period. Significantly, there appear to be many connections between the Tarim Basin mummies and the 5,000 year old "Ice Man" found in the Austrian Alps in 1991. These include the type and style of clothing, personal artifacts, solar-religious symbolism, and tattoos for healing and decoration — as well, of course, as the distinct racial commonality.



The evidence, therefore, increasingly seems to confirm a Celtic culture extending across Eurasia at least 4,000 years ago. As one academic, James Opie, an expert on design motifs in ancient rugs and bronze implements, has pointed out, it is highly significant that Celtic endless-knot motifs, swastikas, and animal-style decorations have been discovered from Europe, through Iran, to China. The religion of the Celts — including the Scythians — was solar, and three- and four-armed swastikas as solar symbols are an omnipresent element in Celtic art. Likewise, the Tarim Basin Europeans displayed a definite penchant for spiral solar symbols, painting them on their faces and engraving them on the bridles of their horses. This in itself suggests that they were Nordics who were and always have been worshippers of the sun and sky, and more generally of Nature. As Dr. Michael Puett, a historian of East Asian civilization at Harvard University, has argued, the Tarim Basin mummies reveal clear processes of a cultural diffusion from Europe outward.



All of this supports the thesis of the pioneering archeologist Colin Renfrew, who challenged the previously accepted idea that prehistoric culture began in the Near East or Central Asia and was only later "diffused" into "barbarian" Europe. It confirms that the cultural prerequisites for civilization are much, much older in Europe than has been acknowledged, and suggests that far from Europe being civilized from outside, it was rather the rest of the world, including Asia, which was civilized by colonizing Europeans. [3]
1. V. Gordon Childe, Antiquity , 32 (1958), 70
2. J. P. Mallory, In Search of the Indo-Europeans (London, 1989), 59.
3. Colin Renfrew, Before Civilization (New York, 1974).
National Vanguard, 117 (March-April 1997), 13-16. Also available in a French translation. See also (off-site) Nova's Takla Makan Mummies.


From:
http://library.flawlesslogic.com/china.htm

Friday, January 11, 2008




East Turkestan











Geography
East Turkestan covers 1.65 million square kilometers. According to official records, the original territory of East Turkestan was 1.82 million square kilometers. The neighbouring Chinese annexed part of the territory as a result of the communist invasion of 1949.

East Turkestan borders with Mongolia to the east, Russia to the north, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikstan, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India to the west, and Tibet to the south.


People
Current Issues

Forbidden traditions:
Pursuant to Article 4 of the Chinese Constitution, Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities should theoretically enjoy the right to “use and develop their own spoken and written languages, and to preserve or reform their own ways and customs”. This provision is reiterated in the famed – and yet-to-be-applied – 1984 Regional Ethnic Autonomy Law (Art. 10). Yet Uyghurs are not allowed to celebrate their Newruz (Uyghur new year) and traditional Meshreps (cultural festivals) have been outlawed in 1994.

Endangered language:
Uyghur language (a Turkic language closely related to Uzbek) is taught as a second language in primary and secondary schools but scarcely used as Uyghurs are forced to use Chinese. According to the Human Rights Council resolution 60/251 from the UN General Assemble of June 2006, 70% of schools in East Turkestan are taught in Chinese. Uyghur was also used as a language of instruction at Xinjiang University until 2002 when the government decided that the majority of courses should be in Chinese. The destruction of thousands of Uyghur books by Chinese authorities is another illustration of an intention to undermine Uyghur culture (Uyghur Language and Culture under Threat in Xinjiang, Michael Dillon, Central Asia-Caucasus Institute Analyst, 14 August 2002). Moreover, the aforementioned restrictions upon religious practice also have a direct impact on the transmission of the Uyghur cultural heritage.

Religion under control:
In China, Imams, Lamas and Catholic clerics are ‘approved’ by Chinese authorities. A majority of Uyghurs are Muslims. Despite the provisions of article 36 of the Chinese constitution granting freedom of religion to all Chinese citizens, religious manifestations are strictly controlled. In his report after a visit to China in 1994, the United Nations Special Rapporteur of Freedom of Religion underlined the fact that the right to manifest one’s beliefs was not guaranteed there. Since 1994, despite numerous requests, the new Rapporteur has not been granted a visa to China. University students are openly forbidden to fast during the month of Ramadan or to show any pious behaviour (Human Rights Watch report on Xinjiang, Oct. 2001). The content of the Friday sermon is kept under strict scrutiny by Chinese authorities who validate all quotes and interpretations of the Quran in advance. The authorities decide upon the legitimacy of religious groups, taking into account various criteria, among which: July 2005, the Xinjiang’s Yili Autonomous Prefecture decided to ban the Sala Sufi branch of Islam and detained and fined 179 followers (Human Rights Watch, China: A Year After New Regulations, Religious Rights Still Restricted, 01 March 2006).

Hajj ban:
Until this summer, Chinese Muslims over 40 were eligible to apply for passports to go on the Hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca, one of the five fundamental duties for all Muslims) but in June 2007, all passports were confiscated and Xinjiang authorities announced that only a small delegation of selected Muslims would be allowed to go to Mecca (Human Rights Watch, China: A Year After New Regulations, Religious Rights Still Restricted, 01 March 2006). Pursuant to the 2004 Regulations on Religious Affairs, overseas pilgrimages to Mecca require a state authorization (Art. 43) and must be organized by the state-monitored national religious body of Islam (Art. 11).

Marked as ‘Terrorists’:
The terrorist attack on the Twin Towers in New York and the "War on Terror" allowed the Chinese Government to start a heavy crackdown on the Uygur religion and basic freedoms under the guise that the Uygur harbour terrorist organizations. In the 2004 Amnesty International Report this is confirmed.
The PRC’s change in public rhetoric about East Turkestan after 9/11 and detail the crackdowns that have led to arbitrary arrests, torture, and executions, as the PRC government has used ‘anti-terrorism’ policies to suppress all forms of Uyghur protest, no matter how peaceful. A section of the report illuminates how authorities have targeted Uyghur intellectuals as part of their strategy to silence dissent. The cases of Uyhjur-Canadian Huseyin Celil and the attacks on the prominent Uyghur leader and human rights activis Rebiya Kadeer’s family illustrate how the PRC’d intimidation tactics extend beyond its own borders.

Environmental problems:
The environmental problems were partly caused by the mass migrations of Chinese into East Turkestan. Since the population of East Turkestan had suddenly increased, the region began to face a serious water shortage. The solution that the Chinese government put into practice – the diversion of the main river system for the irrigation of the upstream areas of new settlers — turned into an ecological disaster in the whole territory, which resulted in the desertification of farms.

Despite the fierce protests of the Uyghur’s, the Chinese Communist leaders continue to order nuclear testing at Lop Nor in East Turkestan that has for three decades produced an ecological disaster endangering human life, polluting drinking water and food supplies and affecting millions of animals.

According to a report released by the Registry of the Peoples Hospital of Urumchi in 1993, the rate of fatal cancer was at least 70 per day, out of an average 1,500 daily sick visits in this hospital.


Population

East Turkestan is the homeland of the Turkic speaking Uyghurs and other Central Asian peoples such as the Kazakhs, Kyrgyz, Uzbeks, Tatars and Tajiks. According to latest Chinese census, the current population of East Turkestan is 18.62 million, including 7.49 million ethnic Chinese settled in East Turkestan after 1949 (the ethnic Chinese numbered 200,000 in 1949). The population of Muslims is slightly over 11 million, with 8.68 million of them being Uyghur. However, the Uyghur sources put the population of Uyghurs around 15 to 20 million.


Language

Uyghur is an ancien
t language with more than 15 million speakers by Uyghur estimates and more than 8.6 million speakers by Chinese estimates. Uyghur belongs to the Turkic branch of the Ural-Altaic family of languages. It is closely related to the languages of the Turkish, Azeri, Uzbek, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Turkmen, Tartar, Bashkurt, Chuvash, Yakutsk and other Turkic dialects.
Uyghur has used several alphabets throughout its history, including forms of the Sogdian, Arabic, Latin, and Cyrillic script, with regional variations. Since 1985, the Arabic script was reinstated as the official script. There is, of course, a great difference between the old Uyghur and the present one


History

Contacts between Uyghurs and Muslims started at the beginning of 9th century and conversion to Islam soon followed. The city of Kashgar quickly became one of the major learning centers of Islam. Art, sciences, music and literature flourished as Islamic religious institutions nurtured the pursuit of an advanced culture. In this period, hundreds of world-renowned Uyghur scholars emerged.


The Manchu Invasion:
The independent Uyghur Kingdom in East Turkestan was invaded by the Manchu rulers of China in 1759 and East Turkestan was annexed to the Manchu Empire. The Uyghurs regularly revolted against the occupation but only achieved independence for 12 years (1864-1876).

Chinese Nationalist Rule in East Turkestan:
In 1911, the Nationalist Chinese overthrew Manchu rule and established a republic.

The Uyghurs, who wanted to free themselves from foreign domination, staged several uprisings against the Nationalist Chinese rule during this period. Twice, in 1933 and 1944, the Uyghurs were successful in setting up an independent East Turkestan Republic. But Nationalist forces each time managed to reestablish control

Isa Yusuf Alptekin served in the government of the short-lived East Turkestan Republic in the 1940s and fled to Turkey when the Republic was crushed in a joint operation by Mao and Stalin. He kept the mindset of a diplomat and in a famous incident in 1981 played host to a delegation from the Chinese Embassy in Ankara. Isa Yusuf Alptekin died in 1995 at age 94.

Communist Rule:
In 1949, the Nationalist Chinese were defeated by the Communists. As a consequence, East Turkestan fell under Chinese Communist rule. Ever since then, the Uyghurs have been discriminated against by the Chinese Administration in all walks of life. The Uyghurs were denied representation in their own country. In the 1950s and 1960s, the central government encouraged significant numbers of ethnic Han Chinese to settle in Xinjiang to ‘dilute’ the Uyghur population and increase Beijing’s control.

In the 1970s, freedoms were gradually re-introduced after the Cultural Revolution.
Mosques were re-built and the Uyghurs were allowed greater freedom of movement. In the 1990s, after the independence of the Turkic Republics of the former Soviet Union, the Turkic peoples of Xinjiang, particularly the Uyghur’s, grew increasingly discontented with Chinese rule, the economic disparity between themselves and the Han-Chinese and the marginalization of Uyghur culture.


Culture

At the end of the 19th and the first few decades of the 20th century, scientific and archaeological expeditions to the region along the Silk Road in East Turkestan led to the discovery of numerous Uyghur cave temples, monastery ruins, wall paintings, statues, frescoes, valuable manuscripts, documents and books. The manuscripts, documents and books discovered in East Turkestan proved that the Uyghur’s had a very high degree of civilization. The first Uyghur literary works were mostly translations of Buddhist and Manicheist religious books.


Religion

Prior to Islam, like most of the Turkic peoples in Central Asia, the Uyghur’s believed in religions like Shamanism, Buddhism and Manicheism. The Uyghur’s embraced Islam in 934, during the reign of Satuk Bughra Khan. He was the first Turkic ruler who embraced Islam in Central Asia. At this time, instead of temples, mosques were built. Almost 300 mosques were built only in the city of Kashgar. Most famous among them are the Azna Mosque, built in the 12th century, Idgah Mosque built in the 15h century, and Appak Khoja Mosque, built in the 18th century.

In the city of Kashgar alone, there were 18 big Madrasas (mosque schools), and up to two-thousand students enrolled in these schools in any given year. these schools were one of the important facilities not only for teaching the Uyghur children reading, writing, and subjects Islamic in nature, but also such familiar subjects as mantik (logic), arithmatik (arithmetic), hendese (geometry), hai'a (ethics), astronomiye (astronomy), tibb (medicine), and falaha (agriculture).

The Mesudi Library built in the 15th century, had a collection of almost 200,000 books.


Organizations
East Turkestan is represented in the UNPO by the World Uyghur Congress (WUC).

Introducing the World Uyghur Congress

The World Uyghur Congress (WUC) is an international organization that represents the collective interest of the Uyghur people both in East Turkestan and abroad. WUC was established on April 16, 2004 in Munich, Germany, after the East Turkestan National Congress and the World Uyghur Youth Congress merged into one united organization. The main objective of WUC is to promote the right of the Uyghur people to use peaceful, nonviolent, and democratic means to determine the political future of East Turkestan.

At the second General Assembly of the WUC, which was held in Munich from November 24 to 27, 2006, delegates elected Ms. Rebiya Kadeer (Rabiye Qadir), the leader of Uighur National Movement and the Spiritual Mother of Uyghur people, as the president of the WUC. Before Rebiya Kadeer (Rabiye Qadir) was elected as the president of WUC, she founded the “Uighur Human Rights and Democracy Foundation” and headed “The Uighur American Association” based on Washington DC. She was also the winner of Rafto Prize and the nominee for 2005-2006-2007 Nobile Peace Prize. For 5 years she spent her life in a notorious Chinese prison. After her release, she has been exerting all her energy to fight for freedom, democracy and human rights for Uyghur people. For her great work she is entitled as “The Leader and The Spiritual Mother of Uighur’s”.

At the first General Assembly of WUC in 2004 Mr. Erkin Aliptekin was elected as a president. He had lead WUC to its second General Assembly in 2006. Mr. Alptekin is a former general secretary of the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization (UNPO) based in The Hague, the Netherlands. He has remarkable experience in working with international organizations and governments in lobbying for the Uyghur people’s right to self-determination. He is also a close friend of the Dalai Lama, spiritual leader of the Tibetan people.

WUC is a democratic organization. All of WUC leadership was democratically elected by the participants from all over the world in the General Assembly. They all serve a three-year term. WUC has close contacts and working relations with most Uyghur organizations in the world that peacefully promote the human rights, religious freedom, and democracy for the Uyghur people in East Turkestan.

Mission Statement

The main objective of the World Uyghur Congress is to promote democracy, human rights and freedom for the Uyghur people and use peaceful, nonviolent, and democratic means to determine their political future. By representing as the sole legitimate organization of the Uyghur people both in East Turkestan and abroad, WUC endeavors to set out a course for the peaceful settlement of the East Turkestan Question through dialogue and negotiation.

The WUC declares a nonviolent and peaceful opposition movement against Chinese occupation of East Turkestan and an unconditional adherence to the international accepted human rights standard as laid down in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and adherence to the principals of democratic pluralism and rejection of totalitarianism, religious intolerance, and terrorism as an instrument of policy.







Xitay hökümiti uyghur déhqanlirini sirtlargha yötkesh siyasitini yenimu kücheytmekchi
2008.01.10
Muxbirimiz gülchéhrening bu heqtiki toluq melumati
Awaz köchürüsh

Uyghur aptonom rayoni partiye ‏- Hökümet dairiliri ötken hepte, yéza xizmet yighini achti. Xitay axbaratlirining bu heqte tarqatqan xewerliridin melumki, xitay hökümitining bu yil uyghur éli yézilirida yolgha qoymaqchi bolghan siyasitide" yéza éshincha emgek küchlirini sirtlargha yötkesh" asasliq muhim xizmet qatarida dawamlashturulidiken.


Xitayning atalmish "kün nuri qurulushi"

Gerche déhqanlarni déhqanchiliqtin bashqa kesplerde terbiyilep, sirtqa yötkep ish pursitige ige qilish, déhqanlarning kirimini ashurushtiki bir tedbir hésablansimu, emma bu siyaset arqiliq toy yéshidiki uyghur qizlirining türkümlep xitay ölkilirige yötkiliwatqanliqi, uyghurlarda naraziliq hem ghulghula peyda qiliwatqan sezgür bir mesilige aylandi. Xitay hökümitining pilaniche, bu yil yézilardin yötkilidighan emgek küchlirini bulturqidinmu ashurmaqchi bolup, 2008 - Yili uyghur diyarining jenubidiki üch wilayet, bir oblastni asas qilip yene bir milyon 500 ming emgek küchini sirtlargha yötkeydiken.


Nöwette uyghur élining hökümet tor betliride uyghur aptonom rayonluq yéza xizmiti yighinining rohi teshwiq qilinmaqta. Bu yighinda " déhqanlarning kirimini ashurush, inaqliq qurulushni ilgiri sürüsh" qayta tekitlendi, hemde bu jehette xitay hökümitining yézilarda yürgüzmekchi bolghan asasliq siyaset hemde muhim xizmetlirining orunlashturulushi tonushturulghan.


Yighinda 2007 - Yilliq xizmetliri xulasilinip, bu bir yilda uyghur aptonom rayonidiki déhqanlarning kishi béshigha toghra kelgen kirimi 3150 yüenge yétip, tunji qétim otturiche hésabta töt yüz yüendin éship memliket buyiche ottura sewiyisige yétishiwaldi déyilgen shundaqla bu tut yüz yüendin éshishqa déhqanlarni zamaniwiy yéza igilik bilen shughullinishtin bashqa déhqanchiliq kespidin bashqa kesplerge yötkep yeni sirtlargha yötkep kirim qilishqa orunlashturush türtke boldi déyilgen.


Xitay hökümiti 2003 - Yilidin bashlap uyghur élidiki namrat déhqanlarni halliq sewiyige yetküzüshtiki istratégiyilik tedbir süpitide, uyghur yéza éshincha emgek küchlirini yötkesh siyasitini yürgüzüshke bashlighan idi. Shundaqla yilda pilanliq halda déhqanlarni déhqanchiliqtin bashqa kesplerde qisqa mezgilliq terbiyilep, yurtliridin bashqa jaylarda, ikkinchi, üchinchi kesp we waqitliq, pesillik ish pursetlirige érishturush arqiliq kirimini ashurush tedbirlirini qollandi. Buni"kün nuri qurulushi" dep atidi. Shundaqla déhqanlarni halliq sewiyige yetküzüshtiki istratégiyilik pilan dep körsitildi.


Mezkür siyasetning yürgüzülüshige uyghur aptonom rayonluq partkom hem hökümet nazaretchilik qilghan bolsa,uyghur aptonom rayonluq emgek we mulazimet nazariti we her qaysi asasiy qatlam memuri organliri siyasetning yürüshishide asasliq xizmetlerni ishlidi.


Sirtlargha yötkigen emgek küchlirining %80 tin köpreki uyghur déhqanliri, %50 i ayallar


Xitay hökümitining statistikisida körsitilishiche, nöwette uyghur élide ikki milyon ikki yüz ming déhqan bolup, uyghur élining qeshqer, xoten, aqsu din ibaret üch wilayet hemde qizilsu oblastidiki déhqanlar bu rayondiki omumiy nopusning %95 tini igileydu. Xitay statistika torida uyghur aptonom rayonining yéza éshincha emgek küchlirini yötkesh siyasitining emeliylishishi heqqide élan qilinghan doklatta körsitilishiche, xitay dairilirining uyghur élidiki yézilardin pilanliq halda sirtlargha yötkigen emgek küchliri mushu üch wilayet hem bir oblastiki uyghur déhqanlarni asas qilghan bolup %80 tin köprekini uyghur déhqanliri, ularning yene %50 tini ayallar igilep kelmekte iken.


Melum bolghandek, xitay hökümiti 2007 - Yilda yenila jenubiy uyghur élidiki üch wilayet hem oblastni asas qilip turup sirtlargha yötkigen éshincha emgek küchini bir milyon ikki yüz ming adem ‏- Qétimgha yetküzdi. Xitay hökümet tor bétide bu heqte bérilgen xewerdin ashkarilinishiche, "bir ailidin birni yötkesh" ke kapaletlik qilip yéqinqi üch yilda her yili 300 ming kishini muqim sirtlargha yötkep ishqa orunlashturghan iken.


Uyghur élidin igiligen melumatlirimiz hemde uyghurlarning inkasliridin melumki, xitay hökümitining uyghur déhqanlarning kirimini ashurush tedbiri dep teripliniwatqan " sirtlargha yötkesh" siyasiti, bolupmu uyghur élining jenubida mejburiy yosunda élip bérilghan bolup, xitay dairiliri mexsus toy qilmighan 18 yashtin 25 yashqiche bolghan uyghur qizlarni türlük shertler bilen tallap xitay ölkilirige türkümlep yötkigen. Hemde bu dawamlashmaqta. Xitay hökümitining bu yilliq yéza xizmet pilanida körsitishiche, xitay hökümiti bu yil uyghur éli yéziliridin yene bir milyon 500 ming emgek küchini sirtlargha yötkeydiken.


Asasiy qatlamdiki bezi emeldar hem kadirlar déhqanlargha bésim ishletken

Uyghurlarning inkaslirigha qarighanda,xitay dairiliri teripidin pilanlighan sanni yeni adem yötkesh wezipisini tamamlash jeryanida asasiy qatlamdiki bezi emeldar hem kadirlar déhqanlargha türlük bésimlarni ishletken. Xitay ölkilirige türlük yosunda yötkelgen uyghur qizlar, tonush, yashash muhiti hem til muhitidin ayrilip qiynalghandin bashqa, ularning emgek heqqi kapaletke ige qilinmighan, kishilik heq ‏- Hoquqliri oxshimighan derijide dexlige uchrap kelmekte iken.
Nöwette bu mesile uyghur élidiki uyghurlar arisida naraziliq qozghighan bir mesile bolupla qalmay, chetellerdiki uyghur teshkilatliri teripidin xitayning érqiy qirghinchiliq, nopus kontrol qilish, assimilyatsiye qilish tüsini alghan gherezlik siyasiti " dep eyiblenmekte. (Gülchéhre)

Uyghurche
© 2008 Radio Free Asia
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Xitay hökümitining 'shehwaniy ün - Sin mehsulatlirini tertipke sélish' herikitining uyghur yurtlirida ijra qilinishi özgiche
Xitay hökümiti 2008 - Yilliq yéza xizmiti pilanida yashlarni xitay ölkilirige yötkeshni dawamlashturmaqchi
Qaghiliqtin 87 neper uyghur yash chingdaw shehirige qarap yolgha chiqti
Uyghur déhqanliri uchrawatqan barliq bésimlarning menbesi - Muqimliq siyasiti
Xitay, uyghur éshinchi emgek küchlirini xitay ölkilirige yötkesh siyasitini izchil dawamlashturmaqta
Qizlar mesilisi -- Nöwette uyghur jemiyiti yoluqiwatqan eng muhim mesililerning biri
Uyghur ilidin xitay ölkilirige mejburiy yötkep emgekke sélinghan qizlarning bir qisimi qaytip keldi
Qizilsu aptonom oblastidin 60 ming déhqan ishqa orunlashturush bahanisida yurtidin yötkeldi
Kériyide yéza nopusining yérimi ishqa orunlashturush bahanisida sirtlargha yötkelgen
Xitay elchixanisi qizlar mesilisige inkas qayturdi
Rabiye qadir xanim xitayning adem etkeschiliki heqqide ispat béridu
Xitay hökümiti uyghur yéza éshincha emgek küchlirini sirtlargha yötkesh pilanini jiddiy élip barmaqta
Xitaygha barghan ishlemchi qizlar nime üginip keldi?
Xitayning, "xitay ölkilirige apirip bay qilish" teshwiqatigha uyghurlar emdi aldanmaydu

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Xitay Ghalchilirigha Muxemmes !!!


Zehrini tiqqach tenimge bu xitay - yilan - chayan,
Zulmidin ingrashqimu yetmeydu hal, yoq imkan,
Yighlisam derdimge bille yighlighay putkul jahan,
Qan - yeshimdin boldi hasil shu mehel derya - qiyan,
Sozlisem qismetlirim titrer yurek yapraqsiman.


Berdi qurban horriyet dep, bu xelq koptin beri,
Horriyet arzusi elning ashti shundaq kunseri,
Ghelibe yoq, emma sawaqlar berdi aqqan qan - teri,
Bildi xitayning niyet - pilanini yash hem qeri,
Ot we sudek birge bolmaymiz xitayle biz haman!


Xumsilarche birliri hemkar bolup xitay bilen,
Ish qilarmish birliship shu paskina tompay bilen,
Xuddi yirtquchni qoshup qoy - qoza, yilqa - tay bilen,
Bille qoyghandek we yaki ateshni... otni may bilen,
Horriyet yollirigha soqmaqchi tosma, tagh - dawan!


Qish kuni zulmetni ---- tunni chillighan shum qagha sen,
El beshida qamcha oynatqan munapiq dogha sen,
Bi kerek bizge peqet, risqimni qilma ogha sen,
”Fidratsiye“, ”muxtariyat“ni xotnunggha qilghin sogha sen,
(„Jung xa birliki“,“awtonom“ni xotnunggha qilghin sogha sen,)
Emma elning konglini chegme, yeyip bulut, tuman.


Wa derixa, toydi el xitay degendin ghiqqida,
Kordi xitayning quruq ”shepqet“lirini jiqqida,
Bu kebi shum gepni ishtse turmamdu herkim tikkida,
Doppimizgha jigde salmaqchi bolushsang shippida,
Yan'ghusi yamanliqing, bashinggha chiqqay shu haman!


Sen xitaygha qanmighan, ya toymighan bolsang eger...
Bol quda we ya baja, ya anang, achangni ber!
Keynidin ket egiship, bolghanda xitay der - beder,
Sen eger adem iseng, bolma iplas u qeder,
Bolmiqinggha ne kerek xitay qeshida it - qawan?


Istiking bolsa neme erkinliking, bilgenni qil,
Emma u oz istiking, hech emes kopke wekil!
Elni satma, xahlisang singlingni sat, ozeng setil,
Anche bek ezweylime, kotungni qis, ozengni bil!
"El terep bolmaq... haman erkek ishi“... bizning mizan!


Wedisige putmigey hechkim xitayning, shu bugun,
Chunki dilda bar azaptin shu xitay tukken tugun,
Aq xitay, qizil xitay hemmisi birdur putun,
Shu xitaylar destidin chiqti mana bashtin tutun,
Bu xitaymu u xitaydek qan icherdur bi guman!


Yemiki poq bolghusi, qaghigha ulpet bolsa kim",
Talisa ghaljir seni ger, qanjuqi bolmas hekim,
Su suzuk bolmaydu, bashtin kelse lay derya - eqim,
Mushuku - chashqan kebi tughma kushende qismitim...
Biz we xitay eyni shu halda imiz, kopke ayan!


Changqighan chollerde bolghandek goyaki sugha zar,
Boldi elmu horriyetke ashiqane intizar,
Bolsa ger el oghli kim, dushmen'ge tinmay gor qazar,
Bolmisa pushti haramliq toghra yoldin kim azar?
Bed du/a, el qarghishi bek yamandur, bek yaman!

2000-Yili 6-Dikabir Istanbul (Shairning Ismi melum emes)

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

Kunst der Grossen Steppenreiche Asiens

- Die diskutierte Kunstgeschichteperiode, die Kunst der Steppenreiche, wurde von den Hunnen oder Hsiong-nu begründet. Diese Kunstform entstand im 3. Jahrhundert vor Christus und dauerte bis zum ersten Jahrhundert nach Christus an. In diesem Gebiet wurden oftmals Tiere als Objekte der Illustrationen verwendet. Filzteppiche, die z.B. Tierabbildungen enthielten, wurden gewöhnlich in allererster Qualität hergestellt. Die Abbildungen enthielten oftmals ausdrucksstarke Bewegungen sich bekämpfender wilder Tiere, wodurch sich umfassende Kenntnisse sowohl der Natur als auch des Verhaltens dieser Tiere widerspiegeln.

- Die Kimmerier, Skythen (oder Sakka) und Sarmaten waren Barbaren, die von griechischen und römischen Geschichtsschreibern als indo-europäische Sprachen sprechende Völker erwähnt wurden. Die Yue-Tsi besetzen die Oasen des Tarimbeckens, als die Han 200 v. Chr. ihre Expansion gen Westen begannen. Als sie von Gansu durch die Han und von Tarim durch die Hsiong-nu vertrieben wurden, zogen die Yue-Tsi weiter nach Westen in das Gebiet der Sakka, wo sie das griechische Baktrien im Jahre 150 vor Christus eroberten und damit den Grundstein für die indo-europäische buddhistische Kushana Dynastie legten, die bis zum dritten Jahrhundert n. Chr. das nördliche Indien, Afghanistan und Sogdien kontrollierte. Die heutigen Tadschiken sind Nachfahren dieser Stämme, die damals zum islamischen Glauben übergetreten sind. Ihre indo-europäische Sprache ist dem Persischen ähnlich, aber heutzutage sind sie geografisch gesehen von den turksprechenden Usbeken, Kirgisen und Uiguren umgeben.


- Man glaubt, dass die Turkkultur und die Turksprachen im 5. Jahrhundert vor Christus um den oberen Jenissejfluss im heutigen Siberien entstanden sind. Turksprechende Völker zogen von diesem Gebiet aus nach Westen in die Steppen nördlich des Aral- und Balchaschsees, wo sie sich zu den Hunnen vereinten, die später die Ebenen zwischen dem Uralgebirge und den Karpaten von den dort lebenden indo-europäischen Stämmen im 4. Jahrhundert nach Chr. eroberten. Ein Jahrhundert später terrorisierten diese wilden berittenen Bogenschützen unter der Führung Attilas Europa. Im gleichen Zeitrahmen wanderten andere turksprechenden Stämme gen Osten in das Gebiet nördlich von China, wo sie bereits im 4. Jahrhundert vor Chr. als Hsiong-nu bekannt wurden. Die Grosse Mauer wurde von den Dynastien Qin und Han gebaut, um China vor den Überfällen dieser unbezähmbaren Kavallerie zu schützen. Der Zusammenbruch der Han-Dynastie im Jahre 220 n. Chr. machte China schwach und geteilt, und bereits ein Jahrhundert später hatten die Topa-Turken das nördliche China erobert, den Buddhismus als Glauben angenommen und die nördliche Wei-Dynastie gegründet.

- Im Vergleich dazu liessen die nachfolgenden Reiche der Sianbi (Shien-pi) und Jujuan (Jujan) im Bereich der Kunst keinerlei Spuren zurück. Aber jeder dieser Nachfolgestaaten hatte seine eigene Schrift. Diese Schriften wurden gewöhnlich auf Holzblöcke geschnitzt.

- Die Sianbi waren in der Verarbeitung von Leder und Holz wahre Meister ihres Fachs. Die Jujuan wiederum zeigten im Umgang mit Eisen, Leder, Keramik und Holz hohe Kunstfertigkeit. Es ist auch äusserst interessant, dass die Sianbi ein eigenes Orchester mit 80 Instrumenten und ihre eigene Nationalhymne besassen, die zu Beginn und Ende von epischen Schlachten gespielt wurde. Beide Völker errichteten auch Gotteshäuser.

- Bis zur Mitte des 6. Jahrhundert hatte sich das Turkreich, nachdem die Jujuan besiegt worden waren, fest etabliert. Dem Kaiser wurde zum ersten Mal der Titel Khan verliehen, und das Reich erhielt den Namen Khaganate. Die Turken, die als Steppennomaden lebten, entwickelten in dieser Gegend als erste eine phonetische Schrift, und sie waren auch die Schöpfer vieler Monumente. Zu den bekanntesten Monumenten gehören die Statuen der "Steinmänner". Die "Steinmänner" stellen Turkkrieger dar, die gewöhnlich in einer langen Robe mit einer mit Feuer gefüllten Schale in der einen und einem Messergriff in der anderen Hand posieren.

- Zuätzlich zu den "Steinmännern" kann man in einigen Gebieten der Mongolei wichtige Begräbnisstätten der Turkführer finden. Diese beherbergen auch noch Statuen von begrabenen Menschen und Tieren, die mit Turkschriften versehen sind. Die Begräbnisstätten wurden als Gesamtkomplexe mit Gebäuden, Tempeln und zahlreichen Skulpturen organisiert.

- Während dieser Zeit begannen die von "Khans" aus der östlichen Mongolei und der Mandschurei geführten mongolisch sprechenden Stämme ihre Expansion in die nördlichen Steppen, die zuvor vorranging von den turksprechenden, von "Chan-yu" geführten Hsiong-nu bewohnt gewesen waren. Bis zum 5. Jahrhundert kontrollierte ihr mongolisches Juan-Juan-Reich die Gebeite von der Mandschurei bis zum Balchaschsee, einschliesslich dabei einer Reihe von Turkstämmen wie den Krigisen am Jenissejfluss. Das erste mongolische Reich war aber nur von kurzer Dauer. Boumin, ein Turk-Vasalle, rebellierte gegen die Mongolen und zerstörte diese mit Hilfe der nördlichen Wei, die sich ihrer Turk-Wurzeln besannen, im Jahr 552 völlig. Boumin nahm den Titel des Khans der Blauturken (oder K'ou-kiue) an, deren westliche und östliche Khanaten die nördlichen Steppen von der Mandschurei bis zum Aralsee beherrschten. Das Westkhanat herrschte mehr als ein Jahrhundert lang, bevor dessen Stämme durch die Ausbreitung der Tang nach Westen 651 zerstreut wurden. Dem Ostkhanat erging es besser, da es unter Khan Motcho expandierte, der viele unabhängige Turkstämme wie die Krigisen um Jenissej und die Qarluk um Ili vor seinem Tod im Jahr 1716 unterwarf. Dieses Reich zerfiel aber 744 nach dem Aufstand der Stämme der Basmil, Qarluk und Uighur.

- 740 wurden die Turkstaemme aber geschlagen, wodurch ihnen die Uiguren nachfolgten. Die Uiguren waren ein halbnomadisches Volk, das zusätzlich zur Viehzucht auch noch ein sehr ertragreiches Einkommen aus Landwirtschaft und Handel, insbesondere aus den lukrativen Märkten entlang der legendären Seidenstrasse, gewinnen konnte.

- Uigurische Städte waren auch wichtige kulturelle Zentren. Dort gab es Tempel und Paläste, die mit kunstvoll gemalten Fresken auf Objekten, die Themen vom alltäglichen Leben bis zu buddhistischen Themen veranschaulichten, verziert waren. Uigurische Wandmalereien blieben erhalten, und gemeinsam mit der Bildhauerei und dem Kunsthandwerk sind sie als Meisterwerke Mittelasiens bekannt und berühmt.

- Es ist interessant, dass die Uiguren eine auf einem Alphabet basierende Schrift besassen, die später dann während des Mongolischen Reichs von den Mongolen übernommen wurde. Dabei handelt es sich um die traditionelle mongolische Schrift, die auch heute noch in Gebrauch ist. Als Ankerkennung dieser Entwicklungen gibt es immer noch Ehrendenkmäler mit uigurischer Schrift, die an diese hochentwickelte Kultur dieser Periode erinnern.
- Die Uiguren sammelten die Trümmer auf und bauten damit ihre eigene Uigurische Dynastie auf, die sich ein Jahrhundert lang (744 - 840) hielt. Dje Uiguren (vom Gebiet entlang des Flusses Selenge) entwickelten eines der ersten Turkalphabete, indem sie das alte Alphabet Sogdiens adaptierten, um die Turk-Phoneme zu übertragen. Nach der Niederlage der Tang am Fluss Talas im Jahre 751 wurde China aus Mittelasien vertrieben, was zu einem achtjährigen Bürgerkrieg unter dem mongolischen Söldner Nan Luchan führte. Der Tang-Kaiser rief den uigurischen Khan um Hilfe an und bat ihm in Austausch dafür die Hand einer seiner Töchter. Der uigurische Khan Mo-yen-cho ging auf den Handel ein und half den Tang dabei, Luoyang 757 wiederzuerobern. 762 eroberte sein Sohn Teng-li Meou-yu Luoyang für die Tang von den Rebellen zurück. Dort traf er manichäische Missionare und brachte sie mit ihm in die Mongolei zurück, um sein Volk zu bekehren. Die uigurische Schrift, die manichäische Religion sowie ein permanent freundschaftliches Verhältnis zwischen ihrer Hauptstadt Kara-Balgasun und China brachte die Uiguren zwar der Zivilisation näher, schwächte sie aber auch zugleich. Sie wurden 840 von den immer noch primitiven Kirgisen eingenommen, die damit ihre Rolle im Herzen der Mongolei einnahmen. Die geschlagenen uigurischen Stämmer zogen in die Oasen des Tarimbeckens weiter, wo sie auch heute noch leben.

- Aber wie auch die vorherigen Reiche zerfiel auch das uigurische Reich, in diesem besonderen Fall fiel es 840 an die Kitanen. Die Kitanen waren ebenfalls Halbnomaden. Sie erschufen zwei Arten von Schriften: eine ähnelte keiner anderen asiatischen Schrift, während die andere gewisse Gemeinsamkeiten mit der chinesischen Schrift zeigte.

- Die Kitanen waren in vielen Bereichen der Kunst tätig, darunter in der Literatur, der Architektur, der Musik und dem Tanz. Sie beschäftigten sich vorrangig mit Landschafts-, Portrait- und Genremalerei, in welchem Gebiet sie auch einflussgebend waren. Auch waren Poesie und Reiseberichte zu finden. Weiters wurden Handelsbezirke, das Kunsthandwerk und das Reisewesen etabliert.
- Zurück im Jahre 686 überfielen die mongolischen Kitan-Stämme, die sich im Mandschurei-Gebiet des Liao-Flusses niedergelassen hatten, Nordchina. Die sich im Niedergang befindlichen Tang erhielten (natürlich für eine Gegenleistung) Hilfestellung durch den Westturk-Khan Motcho, um sie 697 empfindlich in der Schlacht zu treffen. Aus disem Grund wurde die Expansion der Kitanen um drei Jahrhunderte verzögert; sie war aber nicht aufzuhalten, und 929 jagten sie die kirgisischen Stämme (welche die Uiguren ersetzt hatten) bis zum Fluss Jenissej und sogar weiter bis zu den sehr weit westlichen Steppen nahe des Kaspischen Meers zurück. Die Kitanen errichteten ihre Hegemonie über das nördliche China vom Datong westlich von Peking bis in die Mandschurei und machten die wilden Jurchen-Stämme der Ussuri zu ihren Vasallen. Es dauerte ein wenig mehr als ein Jahrhundert, bis die Kitanen ihre nomadische Kriegskunst verloren und das Reich zerfiel, bevor die immer noch starken östlichen Vasallen rebellierten. Die Jurchen überranten die kitanischen Territorien 1114, gründeten die "chinesische" Kin-Dynastie und setzten die Vertreibung der Song von Kaifeng bis nach Hangzhou an der südlichen Küste 1132 fort.

- Im Westen war das iranische Samanidreich 999 zwischen den muslimischen Turk-Sultanen Ghaznavid von Afghanistan aufgeteilt, die Khorassan südlich von Amu-Darya kontrollierten, und den muslimischen Turk-Khans Qarakhanid von Issik Kul und Kashgaria, die Transoxiana und die Steppen über Syr-Darya in Beschlag nahmen. Ein dritter Turkstamm aus dem Gebiet nördlich des Aralsees, die Seljuk, zog aus diesem Konflikt seinen Vorteil und dehnte sein Einflussgebiet aus, das um etwa 1040 Khorassan, Persien, den Irak und die Türkei umfasste.

- Ende des 12. Jahrhunderts war China in den Süden, der von der chinesischen Song-Dynastie von ihrer Hauptstadt Hangzhou aus kontrolliert wurden, und in den Norden, der von den mongolischen Jurchen, die sich selbst als Kin-Dynastie bezeichneten, von ihrer Hauptstadt Beijing aus regiert wurde, unterteilt. Der Gansu-Korridor befand sich unter Herrschaft des Königreichs Tangut-Tibetan Si-Hia, und die Territorien, die so weit im Westen lagen wie Syr-Darya, wurden von den Kara-Kitanen beherrscht, deren Vassalen, die Karakhaniden, Kashgaria okkupierten, während die Tarimbecken die Heimat der Uiguren waren, die konvertiert waren, teilweise zum Buddhismus, teilweise zur nestorianischen Form des Christentums.Transoxiana und der Grossteil Persiens befanden sich unter Herrchaft der muslimischen Turk-Shahs Khorezm, die in Asien beheimatet waren. Die Steppen, die Heimat der Nomaden, teilten sich verschiedene unabhängige Stämme, so etwa einige Turkstämme (Kirgisen, Keraiten, Uiguren), einige Mongolenstämme (Oirater, Tataren) sowie einige Turkmongolenstämme (Naimanen, Markiten).

- Temudschin, der spätere Dschingis Khan, wurde 1155 am Onon, einem Nebenfluss des Amurs, der heute die nordöstliche Grenze Chinas mit Russland bildet, geboren. Er wurde mit 12 Waise und verbrachte seine Jugendjahre in extremer Armut und grosser Not, die er mit Hilfe seines Bruders Qassar besiegte. Mit 20 Jahren heiratete er Börte, die Tochter eines Stammesführers, und wurde Vassal des Kerait-Königs Togrul, der ihm später dabei half, seine Frau vom Markit-Stamm, der sie gekidnappt hatte, zu befreien. 1196 wird er zum Khan der mongolischen Stämme ernannt und nimmt den Namen Dschingis an. Zwei Jahre später besiegen er und Togrul die Tataren, die seinen Vater ermordet hatten. 1203 besiegt er Togrul, und die Keraiten unterwerfen sich seiner Herrschaft. Im darauffolgenden Jahr werden die Naimanen besiegt und unterworfen. 1206 erklärt ein grosses Kuriltai (Versammlung) aller mongolischen und Turkstämmen, das an den Ufern des Flusses Onon abgehalten wurde, Dschingis zum "Obersten Khan" "all jener, die in Filzzelten leben".

- Kharkhorum der Khan residierte dort, als die Hauptstadt des grossen mongolischen Reiches von Dschingis' Khan Sohn Ugudei gebaut wurde. Die bedeutendsten Kunstwerke dieser Periode, die überlebt haben, sind die Portraits der mongolischen Khane und ihrer Frauen.

- Nun begann Dschingis Khan damit, sein Reich zu bilden, indem er das Königreich Si-Hia Königreich bezwang, das Gansu 1209 unterworfen hatte, und indem er Beijing von der Kin-Dynastie eroberte und diese zwang, sich 1215 nach Kaifeng zurückzuziehen. Er nahm die freiwillige Unterwerfung von Kara-Khitan (Ili, Talas, Issik Kul und Kashgaria) im Jahre 1218 an und besiegte das Khorezm Reich, indem er 1220 Samarkand und 1221 Urgench eroberte. Seine Generäle Djebe und Subotai eroberten Persien, Aserbaidschan und Georgien, und sie passierten das Gebiet nördlich des Kaukasus, um die Turkstämme der Kipchak und deren russische Verbündete zu besiegen, wobei sie 1222 Kiev einnahmen. Er starb 1227, während er die aufständischen Si-Hia in Gansu terrorisierte.

- Nach dem Tode Dschingis Khans erbte sein zweiter Sohn Chaghatai die Gebiete zwischen the Amu-Darya und Kublai Khans China (das nicht das heutige Xinjiang umfasste). Im 14. Jahrhundert verzweigte sich das Chaghatai Khanat in einen sesshaften Zweig, der zum Islam konvertierte, Landwirtschaft in seinen Lebensbereich aufnahm und sich in Transoxania, südlich von Syr-Darya, niederliess, sowie in einen nomadisch lebenden Zweig, der die mongolische Lebensweise beibehielt und sich als Meister von Mogholistan (Chaghatais Khanat) zwischen Syr-Darya und China etablierte.

- Im Vergleich dazu war die Kunst des Mittelalters rein buddhistisch ausgelegt. Der Buddhismus wurde einige Male über die Seidenstrasse, mit den Uiguren und auch während des mongolischen Reichs in der Mongolei eingeführt. Aber erst im 16. Jahrhundert konvertierte Altan Khan zum Lamaismus. Bereits kurz darauf wurde diese Glaubensform als Staatsreligion der Mongolei angenommen, als Altan Khan an Sodnomjamtso, den bedeutendsten Mönch Tibets, den Titel Dalai Lama verlieh.

- 1586 wurde das erste lamaistische Kloster auf den Ruinen von Kharakorum errichtet. Dieser Trend setzte sich bis ins 20. Jahrhundert fort, als im gesamten Land zahlreiche Klöster errichtet wurden. Diese Tempel wurden im chinesischen und tibetanischen Stil auf der Grundlange eines auf dem traditionellen mongolischen Ger und Zelt basierenden Modells errichtet.

- Timur, ein Turk-Vassal des Chaghatai Kanats in Transoxiana, bezwang seine Meister und wurde zur Geissel Mittelasiens, der im Westen als Tamerlane bekannt war. Sein Reich erstreckte sich vom Fergana-Tal zum Schwarzen Meer, als er 1407 starb. Sein Sohn Chah konnte nicht verhindern, dass das Reich in rivalisierende Splittergruppen zerfiel. Nach Jahrzehnten des Kampfes fielen im Westen Aserbaidschan, Irak und Persien unter die stabile Herrschaft der Turkomanen, während das Chaghatai Kanat seine Herrschaft über Mogholistan unter Khan Younous um das Jahr 1480 herum im Osten festigte.

- Nach dem Zusammenbruch des Tamerlanschen Reichs nahm die Sheybanid-Horde (von Dschingis Khans Enkel Sheyban), die die Gebiet südöstlich des Uralgebirges besetzte und einige kirgisische Stämme umfasste, um 1350 herum in Gedenken an Kipchak Khan Özbeg, der den Grossteil seiner Horde ein Jahrhundert zuvor zum islamischen Glauben konvertiert hatte, den Namen Usbekistan an. Fortwährende Unstimmigkeiten zwischen den geschwächten Nachfolgern Timurs ermöglichten die Invasion Transoxanias. Die Usbeken eroberten Khorezm (südlich des Aralsees) und Transoxiana (heutiges Usbekistan), wo sie 1500 Samarkand einnahmen. Als sie damit begannen, sich an ein sesshaftes Leben anzupassen, spalteten sich die Kirgisen und andere abtrünnige Stämme (die als Kasachen oder "aufrührerische Abenteurer" bekannt wurden) von den Usbeken ab und bildeten mit Billigung des Chaghatai Khanats eine unabhängige Horde im nördlichen Mogholistan.

- Etwa zu dieser Zeit setzten die mongolischen Oirat-Stämme mit ihrer Ausdehnung aus ihren traditionellen Ländern westlich des Baikalsees (existiert zuerst in der westlichen Mongolei und im nördlichen Xinjiang (Altairegion)) ein, wobei sie die dort verbliebenen Kirgisen aus dem Jenissejgebiet vertrieben und Druck auf die Kirgis-Kasachen ausübten, die nach Westen zogen und sich in drei Horden aufteilten: in die Grosse Horde, die zwischen Tian Shan und dem Balchaschsee ansässig war, die Kleine Horde zwischen dem Uralfluss und dem Aralsee, sowie die Mittlere Horde im Norden der beiden anderen. Diese Horden wurden später zu den heutigen Kasachen.

- Etwa um 1560 zogen kirgisische Kasachenstämme in die Issik-Kul-Region und wurden dort als Karakirgisen bekannt, als die Vorfahren der heutigen Kirgisen. Dem letzten der Chaghatai Khane blieb nur noch Kashgaria, das schon sehr bald in einige kleinere Khoja-Uigur-Königreiche zerfiel.

- Währenddessen bildeten die expandierenden Oirat das Djungar-Reich, wobei sie 1680 die Westmongolei, Ostkasachstan, Tian Shan und Kashgaria eroberten. Als sie von den Oirat stark unter Druck gesetzt wurden, nahmen die drei kasachischen Horden den Schutz der Russen an, die eine Reihe von Forts bauten, aber nicht mehr, bis die Mandschu die Oirat-Bevölkerung dezimierten, das Djungar-Reich liquidierten und Kashgaria 1760 annektierten. Danach fielen die Russen ein, annektierten die kasachischen Gebiete und brachten Kosakensiedler ein, um das Land landwirtschaftlich zu nutzen.
- Im 19. Jahrhundert verlief ein Grossteil der Entwicklung in der mongolischen Kunst in Urga, das heute als Ulaanbaatar bekannt ist; dieses Zentrum wurde zum Treffpunkt von Künstlern und Kunsthandwerkern von höchster Qualität. In diesem Zeitrahmen stellten Thangka-Gemälde (im mongolischen sakhuis) den beherrschenden Kunststil dar, unter Mithilfe unterschiedlicher Techniken wie nagtan, martan und gartan erzeugt wurde. Da in dieser Zeit alle Künstler und Gebildeten Mönche waren, wurden die Thangka-Gemäle als ein Ausdruck der eigenen Spiritualität innerhalb eines traditionellen buddhistischen Rahmens angesehen. Um einen Thangka zu beginnen, wachte der Künstler bei Sonnenaufgang auf, reinigte seinen Körper und seine Seele, indem er die Gebete einer bestimmten Gottheit las. Daraufhin machte der Künstler die ersten Pinselstriche zur Stunde von Glück und Wohlstand.

- Zu Beginn des 20. Jahrhundert wurde die buddhistische Kunst der Mongolei immer sekulärer und etablierte dadurch ihre Gemeinsamkeit mit der europäischen Kunst.

- see
Historical map of the Great Steppe Empires of Asia

Deutschübersetzung Hermelinde Steiner

© Albi - Face Music - Februar 2006

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Friday, January 04, 2008

Amnesty prangert «Weltrekord bei Exekutionen» in China an


Foto: dpa



Peking - Amnesty International hat ein Ende der massiven Anwendung der Todesstrafe in China gefordert.



In einer Reaktion auf die Ausweitung des Einsatzes der Giftspritze statt Erschießungen in China sagte die Asien-Direktorin Catherine Baber am Freitag: «Die willkürliche Anwendung der Todesstrafe, Fehlurteile, darunter die Hinrichtung von Unschuldigen, und die grausame und inhumane Art der Todesstrafe lassen sich nicht ändern, indem die Methode gewechselt wird.» Der Trend weltweit gehe vielmehr weg von der Todesstrafe.



Die Änderung der Hinrichtungsmethode verstoße gegen den Geist der Olympischen Spiele, der die Bewahrung der Menschenwürde in die Mitte der olympischen Bewegung rücke. Ein positives Erbe der Spiele 2008 in Peking könne nur erreicht werden, «wenn der Weltrekord Chinas bei den Exekutionen ein Ende findet», sagte Baber in einer Stellungnahme der Organisation.




Mit schätzungsweise 7000 bis 8000 Exekutionen im Jahr richtet China mehr Menschen hin als der Rest der Welt zusammen.


«Nichts ist würdevoll oder human, wenn der Staat eine Person tötet, egal wie», widersprach Baber dem Vizepräsidenten von Chinas Oberstem Gericht, Jiang Xingchang, der die tödliche Injektion eine «humanere» Methode genannt hatte. Baber sagte, es gebe Beweise, dass die Giftspritze einen qualvollen Tod verursachen könne. Die Teilnahme von medizinischem Personal widerspreche professioneller Ethik.



Amnesty begrüßte allerdings, dass das Oberste Gericht wieder alle Berufungsverfahren übernommen hat, was nach Expertenansicht zu einer Verringerung der Anwendung führen könnte. Da in China aber die Zahl der Exekutionen ein Staatsgeheimnis ist, lasse sich keine Veränderung feststellen. China müsse konkrete Schritte zur Abschaffung der Todesstrafe unternehmen. «Als ersten Schritt muss China die tatsächliche Zahl der Exekutionen öffentlich machen und die Zahl der Verbrechen, die mit der Todesstrafe bestraft werden, radikal verringern.»
Dpa, 04.01.2008




Von:http://news.de.msn.com/politik/Article.aspx?cp-documentid=7152424

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