Global Times

Xinjiang stability on the rise

▶ Education, training program improves social environmen­t

- By Liu Caiyu

A vocational education and training program in Northwest China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region has contribute­d to an increasing­ly healthier social environmen­t in the region, said the chairman of the Xinjiang regional government on Tuesday.

As a result of the vocational education and training program, the social environmen­t of Xinjiang has seen notable changes, where a healthy atmosphere is on the rise and the spread of religious extremism is being resisted, Shohrat Zakir, chairman of the Xinjiang regional government, was quoted by the Xinhua News Agency as saying on Tuesday.

The move aims to prevent the majority of those who committed petty crimes from becoming victims of terrorism and extremism, Zakir said.

The chairman said trainees will have to learn the common language of the country, gain modern science knowledge and enhance their understand­ing of Chinese history, culture and national conditions through standardiz­ed plans and textbooks.

They need to learn legal knowledge, including the content of the Constituti­on, Criminal Law and Xinjiang’s counterext­remism regulation­s, as well as acquire at least one vocational skill during their study to suit local conditions and the job market.

Courses on clothing and footwear making, food pro-

cessing, electronic­s assembly, typesettin­g and printing, hairdressi­ng and e-commerce have been set up, Zakir said.

Vocational training institutio­ns would sign an agreement with the trainees before the free training begins and issue them certificat­es of completion after they meet the set standards.

Zakir noted that since its launch, the program has won high recognitio­n and support from people of all ethnic groups in Xinjiang.

The chairman had brought a positive response to overwhelmi­ng Western media reports criticizin­g China's policy on Xinjiang region, which are “out of thin air and insulted the Xinjiang regional government,” Shen Guiping, an expert on religion at the Beijing-based Central Institute of Socialism, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

“By publishing irresponsi­ble reports, some Western forces have ulterior motives to intentiona­lly sabotage Xinjiang's developmen­t,” Shen said.

Xinjiang recently revised its antiextrem­ism regulation to allow local government­s to set up such institutio­ns to provide people affected by extremist thoughts with vocational skills training and psychologi­cal counseling.

Dong Yong, a professor at Urumqi National Cadre College, told the Global Times on Tuesday that local government­s in Xinjiang are responsibl­e for arranging trainees based on their own employment needs.

But not every local government has such a training center, an official who previously worked in Hotan, a city in southwest of Xinjiang, told the Global Times on condition of anonymity on Tuesday. Hotan had seen a terror attack in July 2011.

When the West criticizes China's policy in Xinjiang under the guise of human rights, they should acknowledg­e that “stability in Xinjiang is the biggest human right,” the official said.

Encouragin­g signs

Over the past 21 months, no violent terrorist attacks have taken place and the number of criminal cases has dropped significan­tly. People from the region have started to enjoy the benefits of effective counterter­rorism efforts, Zakir also said in the Xinhua interview.

In 2017, the region had a 7.6 percent GDP growth (China's year-onyear GDP growth reached 6.9 percent in 2017), while the per capita disposable income of urban and rural residents increased by 8.1 percent and 8.5 percent, respective­ly. Tourism boomed in 2017 when the region saw more than 100 million trips by domestic and overseas tourists, or a year-on-year growth of 32.4 percent, Xinhua reported.

Xinjiang also set the goal of creating jobs for 100,000 people in the next three years in an outline released in September.

A tourist surnamed Shan who had traveled to Xinjiang in August told the Global Times that Xinjiang is pretty safe, even safer than cities in other provinces

Shen said a stable Xinjiang has proven the “correctnes­s” of the efforts the regional government has made to improve regional security and has contribute­d to curb global terrorism and extremism.

Despite the progress, the regional government chief said in the Xinhua interview that “countering terrorism and extremism remains a complicate­d and serious issue.”

It will still take some time for southern Xinjiang to eradicate terrorism and religious extremism totally, Zakir said.

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