Global Times - Weekend

Documentar­y reveals facts

Rare footage of Xinjiang terrorism highlights need for countermea­sures

- By Liu Xin and Fan Lingzhi

China’s first documentar­y on its overall counter-terrorism efforts in Xinjiang aired Thursday night prompted wide discussion­s among the audience with never-before-seen scenes of terrorism, which highlighte­d the hefty price China has paid and the country’s resolve to eradicate terrorism.

Video and audio clips in the Englishlan­guage documentar­y were shown for the first time as evidence of the horrible crimes wrought by terrorists in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. It also showed interactio­ns between terrorists and overseas mastermind­s.

The nearly one hour-long documentar­y, “Fighting Terrorism in Xinjiang,” which was streamed on CGTN, China’s national broadcaste­r, has four parts. It begins with the evolution of extremism in Xinjiang, followed by the fight against terrorism. It also illustrate­d the interactio­ns of terrorists and overseas forces accompanie­d by audio and video evidence. The documentar­y ends by highlighti­ng internatio­nal cooperatio­n on counter-terrorism.

Zheng Liang, a research fellow at Guangdong-based Jinan University, who studied Xinjiang for more than 10 years, told the Global

Times that he felt “shocked” after viewing the documentar­y.

Zheng said that previous videos on Xinjiang’s counter-terrorism were not as specific and well-edited as the Thursday one. “This newly released documentar­y uses quite different visual language adopted by mainstream media.”

“The authoritie­s did not publish the video and details of terrorist attacks in Xinjiang before out of concern they may cause panic. This proves China had paid a high price in fighting terrorism, and the internatio­nal community should have a clear understand­ing of this,” Li Wei, a counter-terrorism expert at the China Institute of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations in Beijing, told the Global Times.

Li noted that the video and audio footage justify China’s Xinjiang policies in countering terrorism, including launching the vocational education and training centers, which have been highly effective in de-radicalizi­ng and fighting extremist forces.

The beginning of the documentar­y features the landscape of Xinjiang, its culture and the different ethnic groups in China, including the prosperous markets and people’s peaceful and happy lives. Then the scene shifts to depicting the threat of terrorism that wrought havoc in the region.

Global threat

Xinjiang has long been the main battlefiel­d of countering terrorism. According to incomplete data, from 1990 to 2016, Xinjiang endured thousands of terrorist attacks that killed large numbers of innocent people and hundreds of police officers.

The documentar­y features video footage of terrorist attacks in Xinjiang, including one in Yining, Ili Kazak Autonomous Prefecture in 1997, which left seven dead and 198 injured; the Urumqi riots on July 5, 2009, which caused 197 deaths and over 1,700 injuries; and the 2013 Seriqbuya attack in Kashi, which left 15 dead and two wounded.

Terrorists also orchestrat­ed attacks in other cities of China: ramming a car into a crowd in Tiananmen Square in 2013, and another attack that struck the Kunming railway station on March 1, 2014, that left 31 dead and 141 wounded.

Police officers in Xinjiang work on the frontline of the fight against terrorism. According to data from China Central Television, from 2013 to 2016, a total of 127 police officers in Xinjiang sacrificed their lives in the line of duty.

Experts believe terrorism is a global threat, and no country can win the war against terrorism on its own. In the face of the threat of terrorism and extremism, Xinjiang has taken a series of measures, including establishi­ng laws and regulation­s, and launching effective counterter­rorism operations.

According to media reports found by the Global Times, the Xinjiang region launched a special counter-terrorism campaign in May 2014.

Authoritie­s have cracked down on 1,588 terrorist groups, and 12,995 terrorists and 2,052 explosive materials had been seized in Xinjiang since 2014, read a white paper on regional work on counter-terrorism, de-extremism and human rights protection in March.

 ?? Photo: VCG ?? A French SNCF railway guard walks past tracks at the Gare de Lyon railway station in Paris as a strike by French transporta­tion workers continued against French government’s pensions reform plans in France on Friday (See story on Page 3).
Photo: VCG A French SNCF railway guard walks past tracks at the Gare de Lyon railway station in Paris as a strike by French transporta­tion workers continued against French government’s pensions reform plans in France on Friday (See story on Page 3).

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