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Uighurs flee city of strife and opportunity

Other News Materials 10 July 2009 11:20 (UTC +04:00)
Uighurs flee city of strife and opportunity

The crush of bus passengers leaving the strife-hit capital of far-west China's Xinjiang has become a heaving, sweating testament to Muslim Uighurs' volatile bond with a land of jobs and opportunity, reported Reuters.

The South Long-Distance Bus Station in Urumqi has been crowded with thousands leaving after Uighur rioters killed 156 people and wounded 1,080 on Sunday. Han Chinese, the country's predominant ethnic group, struck back with acts of mob violence on Tuesday, but security forces have now gained control.

Many in the waiting crowd that spilled outside the station into the sunshine said they were fleeing after days hiding in fear. But many said also Han-dominated Urumqi was much richer and better-serviced than their dusty hometowns, and still represented the best hopes for them to escape hardship and joblessness.

Even as they waited for buses to Kashgar and other Uighur centres to the south, some seemed unsure if or when they would return to Urumqi, caught between fearing China's growth here but also depending on its fruits. A few said never.

"I don't want to leave my business, but I'm scared of being arrested or attacked," said Mutalifu, a clothes vendor in his 20s, fanning himself as he waited for a 24-hour ride to Kashgar.

"I've been telling my girlfriend we won't come back. But I think we will. Kashgar is home but there's no life for us there."

More than 1,000 suspected rioters have been taken into police custody for questioning.

Shopkeepers near the bus station estimated that passengers were about a third more than usual for this busy time of year.

The mixture of dependence on and wariness of China and its wealth was echoed by many at the grimy bus station and may help explain the spasm of anti-Han bloodshed that shook Urumqi.

Many of the Uighurs who attacked Han residents were young men, both local and from the poorer south, said Ahmed Jan, a Uighur doctor who watched the Sunday riot unfold outside the window of his clinic in the city's bazaar district.

"The ones I saw were young men without hope, without work, without education. No chance of a job like mine," he said.

"They know what they want, but they know they can't get it. I don't support killing at all, but such anger must have a reason."

Old men in white skull caps and long cloaks and women fully covered in Muslim head-dresses jostled with young men in jeans and girls in short tops and high heels. Nobody seemed to mind.

Many Uighurs, a Turkic people who share linguistic and cultural bonds with Central Asia, resent government controls on religion and culture, an influx of Han migrants and a growing wealth gap between Han and Uighurs.

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