Silk Road city locked down ahead of torch relay
KASHGAR, China (Reuters) - China locked down the far-western former Silk Road city of Kashgar on Tuesday in preparation for the passage of the Olympic torch relay through the sensitive region populated by ethnic-minority Muslim Uighurs.
Shops lining Wednesday's torch route were shuttered and police stood guard on every street corner. Soldiers and firefighters patrolled the main square of a city seen as the heart of Islam in China's oil-rich border region of Xinjiang.
"Nobody is allowed to watch the torch relay tomorrow unless you are being organized by your work unit. I feel a lot of regret," said Chen Guangsheng, a Han Chinese resident of Kashgar who said her home was along the route.
"The police are coming to my house tonight to inspect it and to register everybody living there."
Windows must be closed and residents were not allowed outside on their balconies during the relay, Chen added.
The torch relay ahead of the Games opening in Beijing on August 8 was meant to be a symbol of national unity and pride for China, but on its international leg it was dogged by anti-government protests. At home authorities are at pains to ensure its smooth journey, especially in troubled minority areas such as Xinjiang.
The Olympic flame will pass through the Tibetan capital, Lhasa, on Saturday, a spokesman for Beijing Organising Committee for the Olympic Games (BOCOG) said on Tuesday. Lhasa was at the centre of anti-Chinese protests which broke out in March.
Human Rights Watch said the International Olympic Committee should demand Chinese organizers cancel the Tibet leg, which was originally scheduled to run for three days, arguing that the government was using the relay as a "propaganda opportunity".
China blamed the riots on Tibet's exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, and his followers, whom they accused of fomenting trouble to further separatist aims and ruin the Olympics.
UIGHUR ANGER
The desert region of Xinjiang which adjoins Tibet is home to 8 million ethnic Uighurs, a Central Asian people who speak a Turkic language and whom China blames for a series of attacks in the name of agitating for an independent state of East Turkestan.
Many Uighurs resent the migration of Han Chinese to the region and government controls on their culture and religion.
The government claims to have cracked at least two Xinjiang-based terror plots this year, one involving an attempt to bring down an airliner flying to Beijing and the other to kidnap foreigners and carry out suicide attacks at the Olympics.
The exiled World Uyghur Congress said the authorities had forced people in Kashgar to sign letters guaranteeing they support the government and had thrown out at least 5,000 Uighurs ahead of the torch's arrival who were not legal residents.
"They're crazy bringing it here," said a Uighur resident called Hamid, tapping his head. "It's their event, not ours," he added of the torch relay. "All we get is hassles."
The torch was paraded through Xinjiang's regional capital, Urumqi, on Tuesday, apparently without incident.
State television said torchbearers were Han and Uighur and from several other minority groups in the region, as the government sought to illustrate ethnic harmony.
In Kashgar's backstreets there was no sign of the Olympics propaganda or flags that lined the city's main thoroughfares. While banners welcomed the torch in English and Chinese, there was little use of the Uighur language.
In a sign of the sensitivity of the torch relay here, foreign journalists were confined to one hotel and told they could not conduct interviews along the torch route.
A government official denied the restrictions were due to fear of "sudden incidents", China's euphemism for protests.
"We expect so many people to come, we thought it would be easier this way," said the official.
(Additional reporting by Nick Mulvenney in Beijing; Writing by Lindsay Beck; Editing by Nick Macfie)
(For more stories visit our multimedia website "Road to Beijing" here; and see our blog at blogs.reuters.com/china)












