Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
International

Uighur Islamic State Fighters Vow Blood Will 'Flow In Rivers' In China

IANS, 02 Mar, 2017 12:15 PM
    Vowing to plant their flag in China and that blood will “flow in rivers”, a video released this week purportedly by the Islamic State group shows ethnic Uighur fighters training in Iraq, underscoring what Beijing sees as a serious threat.
     
    China is worried that Uighurs, a mostly Muslim people from western China's Xinjiang region, have gone to Syria and Iraq to fight for militant groups there, having travelled illegally via Southeast Asia and Turkey.
     
    Islamic State claimed responsibility for the killing of a Chinese hostage in 2015, highlighting China's concern about Uighurs it says are fighting in the Middle East.
     
    Hundreds of people have been killed in Xinjiang in the past few years, most in unrest between Uighurs and ethnic majority Han Chinese. The government blames the unrest on Islamist militants.
     
    The Iraqi arm of Islamic State has released a half-hour long video purportedly showing Uighurs training, as well as some images from inside Xinjiang, including Chinese police on the streets.
     
    One shot that shows Chinese President Xi Jinping gives way to flames in front of a Chinese flag.
     
    "Hey, brothers! Today, we are fighting with infidels across the world! I'm telling you this: Come and live here! Stay strong!," one of the fighters says, according to Uighur speakers who analysed the video for Reuters but declined to be identified.
     
    "We will certainly plant our flag over America, China, Russia, and all the infidels of the world," it says.
     
    In another scene, a man chanting in Uighur says: "Our land of sharia has been constructed with spilt blood." The video then shows pictures of people who were said to have become "martyrs", and identified as "al-Turkista¯ni¯", or men from Turkestan, the name many Uighurs use for Xinjiang.
     
    One of the men speaking has an accent from Yarkand, close to the old Silk Road city of Kashgar in Xinjiang's southern Uighur heartland, one of the people who reviewed the video said.
     
    Another fighter refers to the "evil Chinese Communist infidel lackeys".
     
    "In retaliation for the tears that flow from the eyes of the oppressed, we will make your blood flow in rivers, by the will of God!" he says.
     
    The video, released this week by the US-based SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors militant groups online, also showed two bloody executions of unidentified people.
     
    Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said on Wednesday he was not aware of the video and had not seen it.
     
    "But one point is very clear. We oppose any form of terrorism and proactively participate in international cooperation to crack down on terrorism," Geng told a daily news briefing.
     
    "We have long said East Turkestan forces are a serious threat to China's security and we are willing to work with the international community to jointly crack down on East Turkestan separatist and terrorist forces," he said.
     
    The government says foreign militants have stirred up tensions in Xinjiang, where it says it faces a determined campaign by separatists who want to establish an independent state called East Turkestan.
     
    However, many rights groups and exiles doubt the existence of a coherent militant group in Xinjiang and say Uighur anger at repressive Chinese policies is more to blame for the unrest.
     
    China denies any repression in Xinjiang.
     
    Rian Thum, a Uighur specialist at Loyola University New Orleans, said the Uighurs in the video were presented in the style of Islamic State propaganda.
     
    "To me, the video says more about Islamic State tactics, propaganda, and ideology than it does about the relationship between Uighurs and the Chinese state," Thum said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Gloomy Start To Year Of Rooster As Bird Flu Hits South Korea

    Gloomy Start To Year Of Rooster As Bird Flu Hits South Korea
    SEOUL, Korea, Republic Of — The year of the rooster looks set for a gloomy start. Egg prices are soaring and new year's festivals are being cancelled as South Korea fights its worst bird flu outbreak in a decade.

    Gloomy Start To Year Of Rooster As Bird Flu Hits South Korea

    Teen Allegedly Confined In 8X8 Pit, Raped For Over 3 Weeks In Gujarat

    Teen Allegedly Confined In 8X8 Pit, Raped For Over 3 Weeks In Gujarat
    In a shocking incident, a 15-year-old girl was allegedly kidnapped and forcibly confined in a farm pit for over three weeks in November and raped repeatedly by a teenager at Kotda Nayani village of Morbi district in Gujarat before she was freed earlier this month, police said today.

    Teen Allegedly Confined In 8X8 Pit, Raped For Over 3 Weeks In Gujarat

    China Plans To Become 1st Country To Land On Far Side Of Moon

    China today said it will launch a lunar probe in 2018 to achieve the world's first soft landing on the far side of the moon to showcase its ambitious space programme.

    China Plans To Become 1st Country To Land On Far Side Of Moon

    Pak Defence Minister Reads Fake News, Threatens Israel With Nuke Strike

    Pak Defence Minister Reads Fake News, Threatens Israel With Nuke Strike
    "Israeli def min threatens nuclear retaliation presuming pak role in Syria against Daesh," the minister wrote on his official Twitter account, using an Arabic acronym for ISIS. "Israel forgets Pakistan is a Nuclear state too."

    Pak Defence Minister Reads Fake News, Threatens Israel With Nuke Strike

    Indian Boy Run Over By Car In Dubai

    Indian Boy Run Over By Car In Dubai
    A six-year-old Indian boy died here when he was run over by a car, the media reported on Sunday.

    Indian Boy Run Over By Car In Dubai

    Four-Day Sikh Festival Opens In Singapore To Mark The 350th Birthday Of Guru Gobind Singh

    Four-Day Sikh Festival Opens In Singapore To Mark The 350th Birthday Of Guru Gobind Singh
    A four-day festival to mark the 350th birthday of Guru Gobind Singh opened here on Friday.

    Four-Day Sikh Festival Opens In Singapore To Mark The 350th Birthday Of Guru Gobind Singh