Prospect Magazine has an interesting article by Parag Khanna, who "visits China's remote, rebellious western provinces of Tibet and Xinjiang—and sees how China's government is today bending central Asia to its will." (Thanks, Peony.)
Both Tibet and Xinjiang have the geographic misfortune of lying either
on top of resources China wants, or on the path to resources it needs.
Texas-sized Xinjiang has the country’s largest oil, gas, coal, uranium
and gold deposits, while Tibet has timber, uranium and gold.... Since most of the ethnically dominant Han Chinese are in the east, and most of China’s resources are in the west, this ongoing westward march [of the Han Chinese] is inevitable. And it has meant the wholesale, systematic repression of the indigenous inhabitants by a mix of military, economic and, above all, demographic means. Like the native Americans, the Tibetans and Uighurs have been cornered, corralled and relocated under a system which condescends and harasses at every level. Han Chinese have been taught to think of Tibetans and Uighurs as barbarians, viewing their mission civilatrice today the way American settlers did: they are bringing development and modernity to people and places that have always lacked them.
You and him [http://www.mexicanpictures.com/headingeast/2009/06/requiem-for-kashgar.html] should meet. I saw both these posts come up almost simultaneously in my feed reader :)
Posted by: Nivedita | June 03, 2009 at 04:16 AM