[ssf] Fw: Chinese mob armed with meat cleavers and iron bars take bloody revenge on Uighurs

Gerald Ali. gerald.ali at btopenworld.com
Wed Jul 8 06:31:47 BST 2009


Comment on article below >>

The marvels of Mao importing Stalinism to China, now it's breaks down into racial conflict, soon probably to convert into religious, seems the change over to capitalism is not going smoothly.
The nationalism underlying the Stalinist policy of ''socialism in one country'', which in the USSR meant the dominance of the Russians, is now becoming clearer in China. Karl Marx was correct when he stated that the highest level of Christianity was/is '' the Atheist state''.

The concept of the ''nation'', as regards the 'Jewish nation' in the Bible is incorrect, but so also is the concept of 'race' as used by revisionist christians, neither are defined according to the original meaning of the words -nation or race, the real meanings of both words have been perverted. And unfortunately all those who follow/support the Bible, spread the perversions wherever they go. 
The concept of a 'chosen people' such as a small nation in Arabia, chosen to rule over the whole of Arabia and all its populations, is central to the Bourgeois Bible, the Torah was compiled 2,200 years ago, during the period of the Greek Pharaohs the Ptolemies.
Actually there were no 'Jew's in the original Torah, the chosen people were described as 'Judean's, which referred to a group of Greeks in Judea, Jew is a relatively modern word.
Most Chinese and Uighurs have little or no knowledge of the Bible and probably little historical knowledge of the Greeks either. 

Its the 'belief' in the ' false concepts' that have been 'translated' to the temporal field - social/political, originally by the Stalinists of Russia, the ones who destroyed the Bolsheviks and replaced them with support for revisionist christianism, that underlie the conflict. The same support was given by the Christian fascists of Germany, 'national socialists', a fallacy in itself, and other fascist countries.
Stalinism still has to be cleared out of the peoples political system.

Not that the fascism has ended, there are still groups of Christians, including in China, that are still attempting to steal from the real socialist libraries, including the works of Marx and Engles, to attempt a new perversion of 'socialism', by again attempting to graft together two completely opposed ideologies.
Marxism, scientific socialism, social democracy, communism, whatever one wants to call it, is completely and irreconcilable opposed to the revisionist Christianity of the Bible.
Which itself, christianism, since the rise of capitalism, through the medium of the protestant religion, has been used to justify the modern form of exploitation -capitalism and wage slavery, just as Catholicism was used to justify feudalism and serfdom -slavery.

The statement of Marx, that the highest level of christianism, is the atheist state is completely logical, when one fully understands that all theistic gods are only people raised to the level of a god, as with 'jesus = helper of Yahweh, 'christ = the anointed, which together mean 'high priest'. How when one already has a god, can one leave it open for others to also raise their own god, to do so would only again lead to another round of 'the war of the gods'.
How else does one reach a  position of 'one theistic god', as is outlined in one of the so-called ten commandments, where it say 'the Israelites should have no other god'', a statement that openly accepts and reveals that other gods existed, and further evidence in the Bible of 'warring gods'..
The Chinese as with the Russian Stalinists took this position, unlike the fascists who raised their own theistic gods, Mussolini, Hitler, Franco, Mosley etc. But intrinsically both Stalinism and fascism are but two sides of the same coin, made of the same metal, tempered by revisionist Christianity.
Just as intrinsical is the position of ''beloved George'' and the neo cons, and the Chinese ruling clique, both are fixated by capitalism.

The basis of Stalin's Russia or national socialist countries is not communal/communist economics, but state capitalism, the 'collectivism of industry and agriculture''. State capitalism actually in historic terms preceded the rise of Private capitalism, Henry and Elizabeth period in Britain in the 1500's, to ''Charles the headless'' in the 1640's, then with the reintroduction of Monarchy, the path to private capitalism opened. 
There are still many English writings that refer to Stalin as ''the Russian Tory'', In Britain Charles the second is historically known as the first Tory.
Stalin in the late 1930's, reinstated the Russian church, and appointed, after being trained, the new bishops and cosmopolitan [pope], since then the Russian Orthodox church has been a part of the state, many article have openly stated that many of the leading churchmen and the cosmopolitans have all been KGB trained, and that some are members of the KGB. China also has officialised a Christian church, which is fully supportive of the Government.

Following 9/11 in the USA photos of many Muslim loaded into lorries were included in article regarding the Chinese reaction to 9/11, the Muslims, in thousands were taken off to prison camps. the Chinese version of Guantanomo, but Afghanis not included.

G.A.

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Photos on site .. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1198035/Chinese-riot-police-use-tear-gas-quell-protesters-violence-flares-again.html
Chinese mob armed with meat cleavers and iron bars take bloody revenge on Uighurs

By Mail Foreign Service  
Last updated at 5:20 PM on 07th July 2009


Han Chinese armed with iron bars, machetes and even spades spilled on to the streets today looking for Muslim Uighur targets two days after bloody ethnic clashes killed 156 and wounded more than 1,000.
Riot police used tear gas to try to break up protests in the capital of the Muslim region of Xinjiang and will enforce an overnight curfew. There were no immediate reports of deaths.
Hundreds of protesters from China's predominant Han ethnic group, many clutching meat cleavers, metal pipes and wooden clubs, smashed shops owned by Uighurs, a Turkic largely Islamic people who share linguistic and cultural bonds with Central Asia.
Some Han Chinese shouted 'attack Uighurs' as both sides hurled rocks at each other. 

Some entered the stairwell of one apartment building and tried to smash open the door of another as residents rained down rocks from the roof. Police eventually dispersed the crowd. 
The worst clashes since Tiananmen: At least 156 dead as ethnic unrest spread in China 

Police used tear gas to try to disperse the crowd, but for a while it only emboldened the demonstrators, caught between two sets of anti-riot police 600 yards apart.
Some used water to wash the gas out of their eyes as they pressed towards police at the mainly Uighur end of the street.
'They attacked us. Now it's our turn to attack them,' a man in the crowd told Reuters. He refused to give his name.

Along with Tibet, Xinjiang is one of the most politically sensitive regions in China and in both places the government has sought to maintain its grip by controlling religious and cultural life while promising economic growth and prosperity.
The violence, which has showed signs of spreading in the volatile region, appeared to have little impact on China's financial markets. Stocks slipped on technical factors while the yuan was trading higher against the dollar.
Xinjiang has long been a hotbed of ethnic tensions, fostered by a yawning economic gap between Uighurs and Han Chinese, government controls on religion and culture and an influx of Han Chinese migrants who now are the majority in most key cities.

Beijing has poured cash into exploiting Xinjiang's rich oil and gas deposits and consolidating its hold on a strategically vital frontierland that borders Pakistan, Afghanistan and Central Asia, but Uighurs, who launched a series of attacks to coincide with the buildup to last year's Beijing Olympics, say migrant Han are the main beneficiaries.
Part of the crowd briefly surged forward singing the Chinese national anthem before police drove them back with tear gas.
Anti-riot police armed with clubs and shields pushed protesters away from a Uighur neighbourhood but hundreds managed to break through police lines.

Many of the Uighur protesters were women, wailing and waving the identity cards of husbands, brothers or sons they say were arbitrarily seized in a sweeping reaction to Sunday's rioting in the city of Urumqi.
'My husband was taken away yesterday by police. They didn't say why. They just took him away,' a woman who identified herself as Maliya said.
Abdul Ali, a Uighur man in his 20s who had taken off his shirt, held up his clenched fist. 

'They've been arresting us for no reason, and it's time for us to fight back,' he said.
Ali said three of his brothers and a sister were among 1,434 suspects taken into custody. Of the 156 killed, 27 were women.
Human rights groups have warned that a harsh crackdown on Uighurs in the wake of Sunday's violence could merely exacerbate the grievances that fuelled ethnic tensions.
Navi Pillay, U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, said demonstrators had the right to protest peacefully and that those arrested should be treated in line with international law.
'I urge Uighur and Han civic leaders, and the Chinese authorities at all levels, to exercise great restraint so as not to spark further violence and loss of life,' Pillay said in a statement. 'This is a major tragedy.'

Urumqi Communist Party boss Li Zhi defended the crackdown and confirmed the government had cut internet services to parts of the city to prevent violence spreading.
'It should be said that they were all violent elements who wielded clubs and smashed, looted, burned and even murdered at the scene,' he told a news conference.
Some Xinjiang newspapers carried graphic pictures of the violence, including corpses, at least one of which showed a woman whose throat had been slashed.
Despite heightened security, some unrest appeared to be spreading in the volatile region, where long-standing ethnic tensions periodically erupt into bloodshed.
Police dispersed around 200 people at the Id Kah mosque in Kashgar in southern Xinjiang on Monday evening, Xinhua said. 

The report did not say if police used force but said checkpoints had been set up at crossroads between Kashgar airport and downtown.
Almost half of Xinjiang's 20 million people are Uighurs, while the population of Urumqi, which lies around 2,000 miles west of Beijing, is mostly Han.
Chinese officials have already blamed the unrest on separatist groups abroad which it says want to create an independent homeland for Uighurs.
The Chinese embassies in Germany and the Netherlands were attacked by exiled pro-Uighur activists who smashed windows, a Foreign Ministry spokesman said on Tuesday. China condemned the attacks.

Wu'er Kaixi, a Uighur and one of the best known dissidents from the Tiananmen Square crackdown in Beijing 20 years ago, said there had been no improvement in China's human rights record.
'For a long time, Uighurs have been discriminated against and suppressed in China,' he told a news conference in Taiwan. 'So much so that we're almost colonised by China.'
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