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Xinhuanet 2003-05-26 15:34:31
BEIJING, May 26 (Xinhuanet) --
The Information Office of the State Council Monday issued a
white paper on the history and development of China's
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. The following is the full
text of the paper titled History and Development of
Xinjiang:
Foreword
The Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous
Region (also called Xinjiang for short), situated in the
border area of northwest China and the hinterland of the
Eurasian Continent, occupies an area of 1.6649 million sq
km, accounting for one sixth of Chinese territory. It has a
land border of 5,600 km bounded by eight countries. It was
an important section of the ancient Silk Road. According to
statistics, in the year 2000 Xinjiang had a population of
19.25 million, including 10.9696 million people of other
ethnic groups than the Han, China's majority ethnic group.
There are 47 ethnic groups in Xinjiang, mainly the Uygur,
Han, Kazak, Hui, Mongolian, Kirgiz, Xibe, Tajik, Ozbek,
Manchu, Daur, Tatar and Russian. It isone of China's five
autonomous regions for ethnic minorities.
Since ancient times, Xinjiang
has been inhabited by many ethnicgroups believing in a
number of religions. Since the Western Han Dynasty (206
B.C.- 24 A.D.), it has been an inseparable part of the
unitary multi-ethnic Chinese nation. In the more than 50
yearssince the People's Republic of China was founded, the
people of all ethnic groups in Xinjiang, with concerted and
pioneering efforts, have jointly written brilliant pages in
the annals of itsdevelopment, construction and frontier
defense, causing earth-shaking changes in the social outlook
of the region.
I. Xinjiang Has
Been a Multi-ethnic Region Since Ancient Times
In ancient history, many
tribes and ethnic groups lived in Xinjiang. The ethnic
origins of the residents of Xinjiang began tobe clearly
recorded in the Han Dynasty (206 B.C.-220 A.D.), the main
ones being the Sai (Sak), Rouzhi (or Yueh-chih), Wusun
(Usun),Qiang, Xiongnu (Hun) and Han.
The Sai as a nomadic tribe
used to roam about the area from theIli and Chuhe river
basins in the east to the Sir (Syrdarya) Rivervalley in the
west. Under pressure from the Rouzhi, they moved westward --
some to the north bank of the Sir River, while others
southward to scatter in the areas of the Pamirs. The Rouzhi
roamedthe vast region between the Gansu Corridor and the
Tarim Basin during the Warring States Period (475 B.C.-221
B.C.) and flourished during the Qin (221B.C.-206 B.C.) and
Han dynasties. Attacked by the Xiongnu around 176 B.C., they
were forced to move to the Ili River basin, from which they
dislodged the Sai. The Wusun first lived in the Gansu
Corridor. In the late Qin and earlyHan period, attacked by
the Rouzhi they yielded their allegiance to the Xiongnu.
Supported by the Xiongnu, the Wusun attacked the Rouzhi, and
drove them out of the Ili River basin. The Qiang originally
lived along the middle and upper reaches of the Yellow
River. During the Spring and Autumn (770 B.C.-476 B.C.) and
Warring States periods, some of the Qiang migrated westward
acrossthe Gansu Corridor and the Qilian-Kunlun mountain
ranges, leaving their footprints in Xinjiang. The Xiongnu
entered Xinjiang mainly around 176 B.C. The Han was one of
the earliest peoples to settle in Xinjiang. In 101 B.C., the
Han empire began to station garrisontroops to open up
wasteland for cultivation of farm crops in Luntai (Bugur),
Quli and some other places. Later, it sent troops to all
other parts of Xinjiang for the same purpose. All the
garrison reclamation points became the early settlements of
the Han people after they entered Xinjiang. Since the
Western Regions Frontier Command was established in 60 B.C.,
the inflow of the Hanpeople to Xinjiang, including
officials, soldiers and merchants, had never stopped.
The period of the Wei, Jin and
Southern and Northern Dynasties (220 A.D.-589 A.D.) was a
period of the large-scale merging of ethnic groups in China,
witnessing frequent ethnic migration across the land of
China, and the entry into Xinjiang by many ancient ethnic
groups, such as the Rouran (Jorjan), Gaoche, Yeda and
Tuyuhun. The Rouran were descendants of the Donghu, an
ancientpeople rising on the northern grasslands in the early
fifth century. After establishing a powerful regime on the
Mongolian grasslands in 402 A.D., they struggled with the
Northern Wei (386-534) for domination of the Western
Regions. The nomadic Gaoche, also called the Tolos or Teli,
first appeared around Lake Baikal and the basins of the
Orkhon and Tura rivers. In 487, Avochilo, chief of the
Puwurgur tribe of the Gaoche, and his brother Qunqi led more
than 100,000 families to migrate westward, and founded the
state of Gaoche to the northwest of Anterior Cheshi (the
ancient city of Jiaohe near modern Turpan). The Yeda, rising
in the region north of the Great Wall, moved eastward to the
Tarim Basin, attacked the Rouzhi in the south and set up a
state in the late fifth century. They crossed the Pamirs,
and once controlled part of southern Xinjiang. The Tuyuhun,
originating from the ancient Xianbei people, moved westward
from Liaodong (the region east of the Liaohe River in
northeast China) in the early fourth century, and set up
their own regime after conquering the ancient Di and Qiang
peoples in the region of southern Gansu, Sichuan and
Qinghai.
In the Sui (581-618)
and Tang (618-907) dynasties, the ancient Turk and Tubo
peoples exerted important influences on the course of
Xinjiang's history. The Turks were ancient nomads active on
the northwestern and northern grasslands of China from the
sixth to the eighth centuries. Tmaen, a Turki leader,
defeated the Rouran in 552, and set up a state centered in
Mobei (the area north of the vast deserts on the Mongolian
Plateau). The Turki realm later split into the eastern and
western sides which fought ceaselessly in their scramble for
the khanate. In the middle of the eighth century, both the
Eastern and Western Turki khanates went under, their
descendants being absorbed by other ethnic groups. The Tubo
were the ancestors of the Tibetans, rising to notice on the
Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in the late sixth century. After
occupying Qinghai, they began to vie with the Tang Dynasty
for control of the Western Regions. In 755, An Lushan and
Shi Siming raised a rebellion in the Central Plains, and
Tang troops stationed in the Western Regions were withdrawn
to battle the rebels, whereupon the Tubo took the
opportunity to occupy southernXinjiang and part of northern
Xinjiang.
In 840, large
numbers of Uighurs (an ancient name for modern Uygurs)
entered Xinjiang. The Uighur, originally called Ouigour,
sprang from the ancient tribe Teli. They were first active
in the Selenga and Orkhon river basins, and later moved to
the north of the Tura River. In 744, the Uighur founded a
khanate in Mobei, andlater dispatched troops twice to help
the Tang central authoritiesto quell the An Lushan-Shi
Siming Rebellion. The Uighur Khanate collapsed in 840
because of natural disasters, internal strife andattacks by
the ancient Jiegasi tribe. Consequently, most of the Uighur
migrated westward. One of their sub-groups moved to the
modern Jimsar and Turpan regions, where they founded the
Gaochang Uighur Kingdom. Another sub-group moved to the
Central Asian grasslands, scattered in areas from Central
Asia to Kashi, and joined the Karluk and Yagma peoples in
founding the Karahan Kingdom. After that, the Tarim Basin
and its surrounding areas were under the rule of the
Gaochang Uighur Kingdom and the KarahanKingdom. The local
residents were merged with the Uighurs that hadmoved west,
thus laying the foundation for the subsequent formation of
the Uygur ethnic group.
In
1124, Yollig Taxin, a member of the ruling house of the
LiaoDynasty (916-1125), led his people, the Khitan tribe,
westward andconquered Xinjiang, where he established the
kingdom of Western Liao. In the early 13th century, Genghis
Khan led an expeditionaryarmy to Xinjiang, where he granted
the territories he had conquered to his children and
grandchildren. The Uighurs further assimilated a portion of
the Khitans and Mongolians.
Oyrat was the general name
used for the Mongolians in Moxi (thearea west of the vast
deserts on the Mongolian Plateau) in the Ming Dynasty
(1368-1644). The Oyrat first lived in scattered areasalong
the upper reaches of the Yenisaey River, gradually
spreadingto the middle reaches of the Ertix and Ili river
basins. The early17th century saw the rise among them of the
Junggar, Dorbt, Huxut and Turgut tribes. In the 1670s, the
Junggar occupied the Ili River basin, becoming leader of the
four tribes, and put southern Xinjiang under their control.
From the 1760s on, the
government of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) sent Manchu, Xibe
and Suolun (Daur) troops from northeast China to Xinjiang in
order to strengthen the frontier defense of the region, and
they added to the ethnic mix in Xinjiang. Afterwards,
Russians and Tatars migrated into Xinjiang. By the endof the
19th century, Xinjiang had 13 ethnic groups, namely,
Uygur,Han, Kazak, Mongolian, Hui, Kirgiz, Manchu, Xibe,
Tajik, Daur, Ozbek, Tatar and Russian. The Uygurs formed the
majority, as they do today.
II.
Diverse Religions Coexist and Spread in Xinjiang
As the main passageway and hub
for economic and cultural exchanges between the East and the
West in ancient times, Xinjianghas always been a region
where a number of religions exist side byside. Before Islam
was introduced into Xinjiang, there had alreadybeen
believers in Zoroastrianism, Buddhism, Taoism, Manichaeism
and Nestorianism. These religious faiths had spread to
Xinjiang along the Silk Road and thrived together with the
local primitive religions. After the introduction of Islam,
the coexistence of diverse religions continued to be the
order of the day in Xinjiang,to be joined later by
Protestantism and Catholicism.
Before the foreign religions
were introduced into Xinjiang, theancient residents there
believed in native primitive religions andthe Shamanism
evolved therefrom. Even today, some minority peoplesin
Xinjiang still adhere, to different degrees, to some of the
concepts and customs characteristic of these beliefs.
Around the fourth century
B.C., Zoroastrianism, or Fire Worshipas it was popularly
called, which was born in ancient Persia, was introduced
into Xinjiang through Central Asia. It became
prevalentthroughout Xinjiang during the period of the
Southern and NorthernDynasties and the Sui and Tang
dynasties. It was particularly popular in the Turpan area.
The Gaochang state of that time set upa special organ and
appointed special officials to strengthen its control over
the religion. Some ethnic groups in Xinjiang that followed
Islam once also believed in Zoroastrianism.
Around the first century B.C.,
Buddhism, born in India, was introduced into Xinjiang
through Kashmir. Soon after, it became the main religion in
the region thanks to efforts made by the local rulers to
promote it. At its peak, Buddhist temples mushroomed in the
oases around the Tarim Basin with large numbers of monks and
nuns. Yutian, Shule, Qiuci and Gaochang were all centers of
Buddhism. In Xinjiang, Buddhist culture reached a very high
level, leaving a precious cultural heritage of statues,
paintings, music, dancing, temples and sacred grottoes,
greatly enriching the cultural and art treasury of China and
the whole world.
Around the
fifth century, Taoism was introduced into Xinjiang from
inland China by Han migrants. However, Taoism was limited
mainly to the Turpan and Hami areas, where Han people were
concentrated. It was not until the Qing Dynasty that Taoism
becamewidespread throughout Xinjiang.
Around the sixth century,
Manichaeism reached Xinjiang from Persia through Central
Asia. In the middle of the ninth century, when the Uighur,
who were believers in Manichaeism, moved westwardto
Xinjiang, they promoted the development of the religion in
the region. They built temples, dug grottoes, translated
scriptures, painted frescoes and spread the Manichaeist
creed and culture in the Turpan area. Around the same time,
Nestorianism, an earlier sect of Christianity, was
introduced into Xinjiang, but it was notwidespread in the
early years. It flourished only when large numbers of the
Uighur accepted it during the Yuan Dynasty (1206-1368).
In the late ninth century and
the early 10th century, Islam spread to the south of
Xinjiang through Central Asia. In the middle of the 10th
century, the Islamic Karahan Kingdom waged a religious war
against the Buddhist kingdom of Yutian, which lastedfor more
than 40 years. It conquered Yutian in the early 11th
century, and introduced Islam to Hotan. In the middle of the
14th century, under the coercion of the Qagatay Khanate (a
vassal statecreated by Qagatay, the second son of Genghis
Khan, in the WesternRegions), Islam gradually became the
main religion for the Mongolian, Uygur, Kazak, Kirgiz and
Tajik peoples in that region. In the early 16th century,
Islam finally became the main religion in Xinjiang,
replacing Buddhism.
After
that, Zoroastrianism, Manichaeism and Nestorianism, the main
religions of the Uygur and other ethnic groups, gradually
went out of the picture in Xinjiang, but Buddhism and Taoism
continued to make themselves felt there. Beginning in the
Ming Dynasty, Tibetan Buddhism grew into a major religion on
a par withIslam in Xinjiang. In the late 17th century,
Apakhoja, chief of the Aktaglik Sect of Islam, wiped out the
forces of his political foe Hoja of the Karataglik Sect, by
dint of Tibetan Buddhist forces, and destroyed the Yarkant
Khanate (a regional regime established by Qagatay's
descendants between 1514 and 1680, with modern Shache as its
center). This shows how powerful Tibetan Buddhism was at
that time. Around the 18th century, Protestantism and
Catholicism spread to Xinjiang, at a time when Buddhism,
Taoism and Shamanism were flourishing in the region, and
temples and churches of these religious faiths could be
found everywhere in Xinjiang. Some Moslems even changed
their faith to Christianityor other religions.
Historically, the dominance of
a particular religion has kept changing from time to time in
Xinjiang, but the coexistence of multiple religions
following the introduction of outside religiousfaiths has
never changed. The major religions in Xinjiang today are
Islam, Buddhism (including Tibetan Buddhism), Protestantism,
Catholicism and Taoism. Shamanism still has considerable
influenceamong some ethnic
groups. III. The Administration of
Xinjiang by the Successive Central Governments
The close ties between
Xinjiang and the Central Plains have existed for a long
time. In the early years of the Western Han Dynasty, the
Western Regions were under the rule of the Xiongnu. In 138
B.C., the imperial court of the Han Dynasty sent Zhang
Qianto the Western Regions as an envoy in an attempt to
forge alliances which would stop raids by the Xiongnu on the
dynasty's borders. In 121 B.C., a Han army inflicted a
crushing defeat on the Xiongnu troops stationed along the
Gansu Corridor. After that,the Han Dynasty set up the four
prefectures of Wuwei, Zhangye, Jiuquan and Dunhuang in the
region. In 101 B.C., the Western Han Dynasty stationed
hundreds of garrison troops in Luntai and Quli, south of the
Tianshan Mountains, and appointed a local "envoy
commander" to command them. The title "envoy
commander" was later changed to "envoy for
protecting the region west of Shanshan (Qarqan)."
In 60 B.C. (the second year of
the Shenjue reign period of Emperor Xuandi of the Han
Dynasty), the Western Regions Frontier Command was
established. At about the same time, an internal disturbance
occurred among the Xiongnu ruling clique, and Xian Shan,
Prince Rizhu of the Xiongnu stationed in the Western
Regions,led a cavalry of several ten thousand strong to
pledge allegiance to the Han imperial court. The Western Han
court appointed Zheng Ji as the Frontier Commander of the
Western Regions, with his headquarters in Urli (in modern
Luntai County), to administer overthe whole region. The
local chieftains and principal officials in all parts of the
Western Regions all accepted official seals from the Western
Han court. The establishment of the Western Regions Frontier
Command indicated that the Western Han had begun to exercise
state sovereignty over the Western Regions, and that
Xinjiang had become a component part of the unitary
multi-ethnic Chinese nation.
The government of the Eastern
Han Dynasty (25-220) appointed first a Frontier Commander,
and then a Governor, of the Western Regions to continue to
exercise military and political administration over all
parts of the western territory both north and south of the
Tianshan Mountains. In 221, the kingdom of Wei (220-265) of
the Three Kingdoms Period (220-265, the other two kingdoms
being Shu and Wu) inherited the Han practice, stationing a
garrison commander at Gaochang (Turpan) to rule the Western
Regions. Later, it also appointed a governor to administer
affairsconcerning the ethnic groups in the Western Regions.
In the last years of the Western Jin Dynasty (265-316),
Zhang Jun, founder of the Former Liang Regime (301-376),
sent an expedition to the Western Regions, occupied the
Gaochang area and established Gaochang Prefecture. The
Northern Wei Dynasty (386-534) set up Shanshan and Yanqi
garrison commands to strengthen its administration of the
Western Regions.
During the
Sui and Tang dynasties, the central government strengthened
its rule over Xinjiang. In the last years of the sixth
century, the Sui Dynasty (581-618) unified the Central
Plains. When Emperor Yangdi (r. 604-618) ascended the
throne, one of his first acts was to send Pei Ju,
Vice-Minister of Personnel, to Zhangye and Wuwei to
supervise trade with the Western Regions and investigate
local conditions. In 608, troops of the Sui Dynasty occupied
Yiwu (Aratrk), built a city wall there, and established the
three prefectures of Shanshan (modern Ruoqiang, orQarkilik),
Qiemo (southwest of modern Qiemo) and Yiwu (within the
territory of modern Hami).
In
the early seventh century, the Tang Dynasty replaced the
Sui.In 630, Yiwu, together with the seven cities under its
jurisdiction, changed its allegiance from the Western Turks
to theTang Dynasty, which established Western Yizhou
Prefecture (later Yizhou Prefecture). In 640, Tang troops
crushed a rebellion stagedby the Qu ruling house (501-640)
of the Gaochang Kingdom in collusion with the Turks, and
established a Xizhou Prefecture in Gaochang and a Tingzhou
(Bexibalik) Prefecture in Kaganbu (modern Jimsar). In the
same year, the Tang court set up the Anxi FrontierCommand in
Gaochang. This was the first high-ranking military and
administrative organ established by the Tang Dynasty in the
Western Regions. Later, it was moved to Kuche, and its name
was changed to the Grand Anxi Frontier Command. After
defeating the Western Turks, the Tang Dynasty unified all
parts of the Western Regions, and in 702 established the
Beiting Frontier Command in Tingzhou (later upgraded to
Grand Beiting Frontier Command) to take charge of military
and administrative affairs in the north ofthe Tianshan
Mountains and the east of Xinjiang, while the Grand Anxi
Frontier Command supervised military and administrative
affairs in the vast areas south of the Tianshan Mountains
and westof the Congling Mountain Range. Emperor Xuanzong (r.
712-756) of the Tang Dynasty established a Qixi Military
Governorship to supervise both frontier commands. Qixi was
one of the eight major military governorships at that time
in the country.
The Tang
central government instituted a system of separate
administrations for the Han and the people of the other
ethnic groups in the Western Regions. That is, it adopted
the same administrative system of prefecture,
sub-prefecture, county, township and li (neighborhood or
village) as in the inland areas in Yizhou, Xizhou and
Tingzhou, where most Han were concentrated. In addition, the
equal-field system (the farmland system of the Tang Dynasty)
and taxation system of payment in kind and labor were
adopted, as well as the system of prefectural military
commands. In the areas inhabited by other ethnic groups, the
Tang rulers governed through the traditional chiefs and
headmen, who were granted civil and military titles but
allowed to manage localaffairs according to their own
customs. At the same time, the central government stationed
garrisons in Qiuci, Yutian, Shule andSuiye (or Suyab,
formerly Yanqi), which were known as the "four garrison
commands of Anxi."
Internal strife in the Central
Plains during the Five Dynastiesperiod, and the Song, Liao
and Jin dynasties distracted the attention of rulers of the
Central Plains from the Western Regions,resulting in several
local regimes existing side by side in the Western Regions.
The local governments of Gaochang, Karahan and Yutian
exercised a great degree of autonomy, but they all
maintained close ties with the ruling dynasties in the
Central Plains.
The Gaochang
and Karahan were local regimes established by the Uighurs,
who had moved west to the Western Regions together with
other Turki-speaking tribes after the Mobei Uighur Khanate
collapsed in 840. The Gaochang had the Turpan area as its
center while the Karahan controlled the vast areas south of
the Tianshan Mountains and Hezhong (Samarkand) in Central
Asia.
The Uighur local regimes
had very close relations with the ruling dynasties in the
Central Plains. The ruler of the Karahan Kingdom called
himself the "Peach Stone Khan," meaning
"Chinese Khan," to indicate that he was a Chinese
subject. In 1009, after occupying Yutian, Karahan sent
envoys with tribute to the emperor of the Northern Song
Dynasty (960-1127). In 1063, the Northern Song conferred
upon the ruler of Karahan the title of "King of Sworn
Allegiance." In the third year after the founding of
the Northern Song Dynasty, the Gaochang Uighurs sent 42
envoys bearingtribute to the Northern Song court.
Yutian was the habitat of the
Sai people. In recognition of itsmaintaining close ties with
the Central Plains, the Tang Dynasty conferred an official
title on the ruling clan of Yutian, which then changed its
surname from Yuchi to Li, the surname of the Tangruling
house. In 938, Emperor Gaozu of the Later Jin Dynasty sent
Zhang Kuangye and Gao Juhui to Yutian as envoys to confer on
Li Shengtian, Yutian's ruler, the title of "King of the
Great Treasure Yutian State." In the early years of the
Northern Song Dynasty, envoys and monks from Yutian brought
tribute to the Song Dynasty court from time to time.
The founder of the Yuan
Dynasty, Genghis Khan, completed the political unification
of the regions north and south of the Tianshan Mountains. He
first set up military and administrative organs like
"Dargaq" (a Mongolian official title, meaning
"garrison officer") and "Bexibalik
Secretariat" to take charge of the military and
administrative affairs of the Western Regions. After the
Yuan Dynasty was proclaimed, while giving attention to
socio-economic development in the Western Regions, it
appointed a judicial commissioner in the Turpan region.
Later, a treasury and printing house for banknotes were
established there, together witha Bexibalik Command to
administer the Turpan area, which was garrisoned by soldiers
of the vanquished Southern Song Dynasty army, who were also
there to open up wasteland. At the same time, the Yuan court
sent soldiers to Hotan and Qiemo for garrison and
reclamation duties, set up a foundry in Bexibalik to make
farm tools, and instituted a land tax system in the Uighur
areas. In 1406, the Ming Dynasty set up a Hami Garrison
Command, and appointed the heads of the leading families in
Hami as officials to manage local military and
administrative affairs, so as to keepthe trade routes to the
West open and bring the other areas of theWestern Regions
under its control.
The Qing
government consolidated unified jurisdiction over the
Western Regions. In 1757, the Qing imperial court crushed
the long-standing Junggar separatist regime in the
Northwest. Two years later, it quelled a rebellion launched
by the Islamic Aktaglik Sect leaders Burhanidin and
Hojajahan, thus consolidating its military and
administrative jurisdiction over all parts of the Western
Regions. The post of Ili General was established in 1762 to
exercise unified military and administrative jurisdiction
over the regions both south and north of the Tianshan
Mountains, with the headquarters in Huiyuan (in modern
Huocheng County) and staffed with officials like
supervisors, consultants, superintendents and commissioners.
In accordance with the principle of "doing what is
appropriate in the light of local conditions" and
"exercising administration according to local
customs," the Qing government adopted the system of
prefectures and counties in the region north of the Tianshan
Mountains inhabited by people of the Han and Hui ethnic
groups, and maintained the local "Baeg system" (a
Turki term for local officials) for the Uygurs in the Ili
region and the region south of the Tianshan Mountains. Even
in the latter region, however, thecentral government
reserved the power to make official appointments and
removals with the strict separation of religion from
politics. It adopted the system of "Jasak" (a
Mongolian term for governor) by conferring the hereditary
titles of princes and dukes on Mongolians and the Uygurs in
the Hami and Turpan regions.It also recruited officials from
other ethnic groups besides the Manchus. In economic
affairs, the Qing promoted the simultaneous development of
farming and livestock breeding, with the emphasis on
farming. It also reduced taxes and fixed quotas for
financial subsidies. Xinjiang witnessed steady social and
economic development under the Qing Dynasty.
Following the Opium War of
1840, Xinjiang was subject to aggression from Tsarist Russia
and other powers. In 1875, Zuo Zongtang, governor-general of
Shaanxi and Gansu provinces, was appointed imperial
commissioner to supervise the affairs of Xinjiang. By the
end of 1877, Qing troops had recovered the areas north and
south of the Tianshan Mountains which had been occupied by
Yakubbae of Central Asia's Kokand Khanate (Fergana). In
February 1881, the Qing government recovered Ili, which had
been forcibly occupied by Tsarist Russia for 11 years. In
1884, it formally established a province in the Western
Regions and renamedthe area as Xinjiang (meaning "old
territory returned to the motherland"). The
establishment of Xinjiang as a province was a significant
reform, on the part of the Qing government, of the
administration of Xinjiang by the previous dynasties. From
then on,the provincial governor oversaw all military and
administrative affairs in Xinjiang, and the military and
administrative center ofXinjiang was moved from Ili to Dihua
(modern Urumqi). By 1909, under the jurisdiction of Xinjiang
Province were 4 dao (circuit), under which were 6
prefectures, 10 ting (sub-circuits), 3 sub-prefectures and
21 counties or sub-counties. The administrative organization
in Xinjiang was exactly the same as in the inland areas.
In the year following the
Revolution of 1911, insurrectionary revolutionaries in
Xinjiang set up the New Ili Grand Military Government,
marking the end of the political rule of the Qing Dynasty in
the Ili region. After the Republic of China was founded,it
constantly strengthened the defense of
Xinjiang.
Xinjiang was
peacefully liberated on September 25, 1949. As theliberation
struggle gained momentum across the country and the
revolutionary struggle of the people of all ethnic groups
surged forward in Xinjiang, Tao Zhiyue, Garrison Commander
of Xinjiang, and Burhan, Chairman of the Xinjiang Provincial
Government, renounced their allegiance to the Kuomintang and
welcomed in the First Army Group of the First Field Army of
the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA), led by General
Wang Zhen. The people of allethnic groups in Xinjiang
greeted the founding of the People's Republic of China
together with the rest of the Chinese people on October 1,
1949.
To sum up, since the Han
Dynasty established the Western Regions Frontier Command in
Xinjiang in 60 B.C., the Chinese central governments of all
historical periods exercised military and administrative
jurisdiction over Xinjiang. The jurisdiction ofthe central
governments over the Xinjiang region was at times strong and
at other times weak, depending on the stability of the
period. The people of all ethnic groups in Xinjiang actively
safeguarded their relations with the central governments,
thus making their own contributions to the formation and
consolidation of the great family of the Chinese
nation. IV. Origin of the "East
Turkistan" Issue
The term
"Turkistan" appeared in Arabic geographical works
in the Middle Ages. It meant "the region of the
Turks" and referred to the areas north of the Sir River
in Central Asia and the adjoining areas to the east of the
river. With the evolution of history, the modern ethnic
groups in Central Asia were establishedone after another. By
the 18th century, the geographical concept of
"Turkistan" was already very vague, and almost
nobody used it again in the historical records of the time.
In the early 19th century, with the growing colonial
expansion of the imperialist powers into Central Asia, the
geographical term "Turkistan" was revived. In
1805, Timkovsky, a Russian, used the term
"Turkistan" again in a diplomatic mission's report
to describe the geographical position of Central Asia and
the Tarim Basin in China's southern Xinjiang. In view of the
different histories, languages, customs and political
affiliations of the two areas, hecalled the Tarim Basin in
China's Xinjiang situated to the east
of"Turkistan" as "East Turkistan" or
"Chinese Turkistan." In the middle of the 19th
century, Russia annexed the three Central Asiankhanates of
Khiva, Bukhara and Kokand one after another, and set up the
"Turkistan Governorship" in the Hezhong
(Samarkand) area ofCentral Asia. Therefore, some people in
the West called the Hezhong area "West Turkistan"
or "Russian Turkistan," and China's Xinjiang
region "East Turkistan."
In the early 20th century and
later, a small number of separatists and religious
extremists in Xinjiang, influenced by the international
trend of religious extremism and national chauvinism,
politicized the unstandardized geographical term
"EastTurkistan," and fabricated an
"ideological and theoretical system"on the
so-called "independence of East Turkistan" on the
basis of the allegation cooked up by the old colonialists.
They claimed that "East Turkistan" had been an
independent state since ancient times, its people with its
history of almost 10,000 years being "the finest nation
in human history." They incited all ethnic groups
speaking Turki and believing in Islam to join hands to
create a theocratic state. They denied the history of the
great motherland jointly built by all the ethnic groups of
China. They clamored for "opposition to all ethnic
groups other than Turks" and for the "annihilation
of pagans," asserting that China had been "the
enemy of the 'East Turkistan' nation for 3,000 years."
After the "East Turkistan" theory came into being,
separatists of all shades raised the banner of "East
Turkistan" to carry out activities aimed at
materializing their vain wish of establishing an "East
Turkistan state."
From
the early 20th century to the late 1940s, the "East
Turkistan" forces created many disturbances with the
connivance and support of hostile foreign forces. In
November 1933, Sabit Damolla and others founded the
so-called "East Turkistan Islamic Republic" in
Kashi, but it collapsed in less than three months thanks to
the opposition of the people of all ethnic groups in
Xinjiang. In 1944, the "Revolution of the Three
Regions," which was part of Chinese people's democratic
revolutionary movement, broke out against the Kuomintang
rule (the three regions referred to Ili, Tacheng and Altay),
but separatist Elihan Torae (an Uzbek from the former Soviet
Union) usurped the leadership of the revolution in its early
days, and founded the so-called "Republic of East
Turkistan" in Yining, with himself as its
"chairman." In June 1946, Ahmatjan Kasimi and
Abdukerim Abbasov, leaders of the revolution, dismissed him
from that post, and reorganized the "Republic of East
Turkistan" as the Advisory Council of the Ili
Subprovincial Administrative Region, dealing a fatal blow at
the separatist forces.
Since
the peaceful liberation of Xinjiang, the "East
Turkistan"forces have never resigned themselves to
their defeat. The tiny group of separatists who had fled
abroad from Xinjiang collaborated with those at home, and
looked for opportunities to carry out splittist and sabotage
activities with the support of international anti-China
forces. Especially in the 1990s, influenced by religious
extremism, separatism and international terrorism, part of
the "East Turkistan" forces both inside and
outside China turned to splittist and sabotage activities
with terrorist violence as their chief means. Some
"East Turkistan" organizations openly stated that
they would use terrorist and violent means to achieve their
purpose of separation. The "East Turkistan" forces
in China's Xinjiang and relevant countries plotted and
organized a number of bloody incidents of terror and
violence, including explosions, assassinations, arsons,
poisoningsand assaults, seriously jeopardizing the lives,
property and security of the Chinese people of various
ethnic groups, and social stability in Xinjiang, and posing
a threat to the security and stability of the countries and
regions concerned.
After the
September 11 incident, the voices calling for an
international anti-terrorist struggle and cooperation have
become louder and louder. In order to get out of their
predicament, the "East Turkistan" forces once
again have raised the banner of "humanrights,"
"freedom of religion" and "interests of
ethnic minorities," and fabricated claims that
"the Chinese government is using every opportunity to
oppress ethnic minorities," to mislead the public and
deceive world opinion in order to escape blows dealt bythe
international struggle against terrorism. V.
The Economic Development of Xinjiang After the Founding of
New China
Before the founding
of the People's Republic of China, the economy of Xinjiang
was a natural economy, with farming and livestock breeding
as the mainstay. Industry was underdeveloped, and there were
no railways or up-to-the-mark factories or mines. Famines
were frequent in some areas, and the people were
impoverished. Xinjiang was peacefully liberated on September
25, 1949. On October 1, 1955, the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous
Region wasestablished, opening a new page for historical
development in Xinjiang. In the past half century,
Xinjiang's economy and social undertakings have advanced by
leaps and bounds.
Fast growth
of the economy. The GDP of Xinjiang was 148.548 billion yuan
in 2001. Taking price rises into account, this was 42.9
times that of 1952, and an annual growth rate of 8.0%. The
per-capita GDP rose from 166 yuan in 1952 to 7,913 yuan in
2001. The autonomous region's revenues amounted to 17.807
billion yuan in 2001, or 102.9 times the 1955 figure of 173
million yuan. Xinjiang's industrial structure has been
constantly adjusted and optimized.Primary, secondary and
tertiary industries accounted for 19.4%, 42.4% and 38.2% of
the GDP in 2001, respectively. Compared with 1955,the
proportion of primary industry dropped by 35 percentage
points,that of secondary industry rose by 16.3 percentage
points, and that of tertiary industry rose by 18.7
percentage points.
The overall
production capacity of agriculture has risen notably. After
50-plus years of development and construction, and
especially since the reform and opening policies were
introduced, a complete farmland irrigation network in
Xinjiang has been preliminarily formed, and the level of
modern farm equipment has risen. By 2001, the total power
output of farm machinery came to 8,808,500 kw, the net
quantity of chemical fertilizers used for farming was
832,900 tons, and rural power consumption totaled 2.545
billion kwh. Meanwhile, the total sown area was 3,404,120
ha, double the 1955 figure. The total output of food grains,
cotton and sugar beet was 7.96 million tons, 1.57 million
tons and 4.55 million tons, respectively, or 5.4 times, 62.5
times and 4,551.2 times the figures for 1955, respectively.
Turpan grapes, Korla pears and Hami melons, which have long
been famous Xinjiang products, sell well on both foreign and
domestic markets. Specialty horticulture and crop planting
have leapfrogged in the past few years. Livestock breeding
is being promoted with the use of the latest findings in
agricultural science and technology. At the end of 2001, the
region had 46.0378 million head of livestock,2.8 times the
number in 1955. In addition, Xinjiang has become thelargest
producer of commodity cotton, hops and tomato sauce, and one
of the major livestock breeding and beet-sugar producing
centers in China.
Industrial
strength rising rapidly. There were only 363 industrial
enterprises in Xinjiang, with an annual output value of98
million yuan, when New China was founded. In 2001, there
were 6,287 industrial enterprises at and above the township
level, with an added value of 45 billion yuan, and the
output of major industrial products has all increased by
large margins. In 2001, Xinjiang produced 19.4695 million
tons of crude oil, 28.1961 million tons of raw coal, 302,700
tons of cotton yarn and 19.762 billion kwh of electricity --
591.78 times, 43.68 times, 81.8 times and 359.3 times the
1955 figures, respectively. It also produced 419,800 tons of
refined sugar, 1.3183 million tons of steel, 9.8129 million
tons of cement and 729,000 tons of chemical fertilizer. The
region's industrial strength has greatly increasedand the
technological level has notably risen. A modern
industrialsystem of considerable size complete with all
necessary departments has taken shape, with the intensive
processing of farmand sideline products as its leading
industrial sector, backed up by the oil, petrochemicals,
steel, coal, electric power, textile, building materials,
chemicals, pharmaceuticals, food processing and light
industries.
Notable
achievements made in water conservancy. On the basis
of"oasis ecology and irrigated farmland," Xinjiang
has carried out large-scale farm water conservancy
construction. The multi-purposeproject to harness the Tarim
River has, on four occasions, diverted 1.05 billion cu m of
water from Bosten Lake to the lower reaches of the river. A
number of modern, large-scale water conservancy projects
represented by Kizil Reservoir and the Ulug Ata key water
control project in Hotan and large numbers of trunk and
branch canals, as well as seepage control projects have been
built, thus rapidly increasing the amount of water diverted,
the capacity of the reservoirs and the well-irrigated area
in the whole region. By 2000, there were 485 reservoirs with
a total holding capacity of well over 6.716 billion cu m --
162 times and 200 times the 1949 figures, respectively. The
total area of irrigated fields has been expanded to 3.388
million ha. The flood control dykes and dams built in the
period totaled 5,129 km -- 17.7 times the 1949 figure of 289
km.
Swift expansion of
communications and transportation. Draught animals were the
chief means of transport in Xinjiang prior to thefounding of
New China. There was almost no modern transport. In the more
than 50 years since then, Xinjiang has witnessed a drastic
change in the communications and transport industry. The
Lanzhou-Xinjiang Railway reached Urumqi at the end of 1962,
bringing railway transport to the region for the first time.
The 476-km-long western section of the Southern Xinjiang
Railway, fromTurpan to Korla, was opened to traffic in 1984.
A stretch of 460 km was added to the western section of the
Lanzhou-Xinjiang Railway in 1990, reaching the Alatav Pass
from Urumqi, thus completing the second Eurasian continental
bridge. In 1994, the Lanzhou-Xinjiang Railway was
double-tracked and opened to traffic.In 1999, the 975-km
section of the Southern Xinjiang Railway was completed,
extending from Korla to Kashi, and opened to traffic. By
2001, operating railway lines totaled 3,010.4 km. In 1949,
Xinjiang had only several crudely built highways, with a
total length of a mere 3,361 km, but by 2001, the region's
highways had been extended to 80,900 km, including 428 km of
expressways, 230 km of Grade 1 highways and 5,558 km of
Grade 2 highways. The highway running through the Taklimakan
Desert is a long-distance graded highway, the first one in
the world built on shifting sands.Now, a highway network
covers the whole region, with Urumqi as thecenter and seven
national highways as the backbone linking the region with
Gansu and Qinghai provinces to the east, the
adjoiningcountries in Central and West Asia to the west and
Tibet to the south. The network is also connected with the
region's 68 provincial highways. Buses now run to all
cities, prefectures, counties and townships in the region.
Xinjiang has 11 airports, both newly built and enlarged,
with international air routes connecting Urumqi with
Alma-Ata, Tashkent, Moscow and Islamabad, as well as
chartered flights to Hong Kong. In all, there are 92 air
lines radiating from Urumqi to 65 cities in other parts of
thecountry and abroad and to 12 prefectures and cities
within the autonomous region. The total length of the air
routes is 161,800 km.
The
development of telecommunications facilities in Xinjiang has
kept pace with the national network. Xinjiang has built
digital microwave trunk circuits linking Urumqi with Ili
through Kuytun and Bole, linking Kuytun with Altay through
Karamay, and from Turpan to Hotan through Korla, Aksu and
Kashi. Digital microwave communications link the southern
and northern parts of the region, and optical cable trunk
lines link Urumqi with Xi'an, Lanzhou, Yining, Korgas
checkpoint, Turpan, Korla, Ruoqiang and Mangya. A DDD
telephone network now links all the cities and counties in
Xinjiang with all other parts of China, and the region's
telephone subscribers have reached the grand total of 2.626
million. The local data communications network and
multi-media communications network have developed rapidly,
and an ATM wide-band network covers all prefectures and
cities. The construction of an IP-based citywide LAN has
been started. A mobile phone network with a capacity of
2.924 million users is now in place to cover the whole
region.
Rapid growth of
foreign trade. Xinjiang's foreign trade is conducted in
multiple flexible ways, including spot trade, border trade,
processing with materials supplied by customers,
compensation trade, and tourism. By 2001, Xinjiang had trade
relations with 119 countries and regions. Nearly 1,000
commodity items in 22 categories were on the export list.
Among them, 10 export commodities earned more than US$ 10
million each. The totalvalue of Xinjiang's exports and
imports amounted to US$ 1.77 billion in that year. The
export product mix has been constantly improved, from
primary bulk products with low added value to
electromechanical and precision instruments with high added
value.Now, manufactured goods account for 67% of Xinjiang's
exports. As one of the important autonomous regions
(provinces) carrying out the government strategy of opening
China's border areas to the outside world, Xinjiang has
gradually formed an omnidirectional, multi-level and
wide-range opening pattern by expanding the links with
foreign countries and China's various provinces along the
borders, bridges (Eurasian continental bridges) and trunk
communication lines to become China's frontline in opening
to the West.
Boom in tourism.
With wonderful and rare natural scenery and colorful ethnic
customs, Xinjiang has greatly expanded its tourismsector. In
2001, the region hosted 273,000 international tourists,and
earned US$ 98.56 million in foreign exchange. It also hosted
8.393 million domestic tourists, and earned 7.18 billion
yuan. The region's capacity for accommodating tourists has
greatly expanded in recent years. In 2001, there were 250
hotels for foreign tourists, including 173 star-rated
hotels. The tourist trade has become a new economic growth
point for economic development in Xinjiang. VI. Progress in Education, Science
and Technology, Culture and Health Work
During the half century or
more since the founding of New China,all social undertakings
in Xinjiang have undergone historic changes.
Education developing steadily.
Compared with that of 1949, in the year of 2001, the number
of primary schools in the region increased from 1,335 to
6,221, middle schools from 9 to 1,929, polytechnic schools
from 11 to 99, and regular institutions of higher learning
from 1 to 21. The number of students currently registered at
local institutions of higher learning has increased from 400
to 110,000, and 185,000 students have graduated from regular
institutions of higher learning. The number of students
currently registered at polytechnic schools has increased
from 2,000 to 97,300. Elementary education has been
continuously improved,and nine-year compulsory education has
been realized in 65 counties (cities, districts). Adult
education of various types hasmade steady progress. A
multi-level, multi-form occupational training system has by
and large been in place. The ratio of the educated
population of the region has grown remarkably. The
proportion of illiteracy among the young and middle-aged has
dropped to less than 2%.
Progress in science and
technology. The overall strength of science and technology
has increased tremendously. The region has established a
research and development system, a technology popularization
system, and a sci-tech administration and service system
with relatively complete and supplementary disciplines,
relatively rational distribution and distinctive local
characteristics; trained a crop of sci-tech specialists with
high academic achievements; created a sci-tech contingent
made up of people of various ethnic groups and highly
capable of research, development, experimentation,
popularization and management; and built a number of
laboratory centers and experimental bases characteristic of
the sci-tech advantages of Xinjiang. The accelerated
industrialization and commercialization of sci-tech research
findings have changed Xinjiang's traditional ways of
agricultural production and operation, and notable
achievements have been made in protective plant cultivation,
irrigation technology and strain improvement. The
technological transformation of industrial enterprises has
enhanced both their economic efficiency and market
competitiveness. Science and technology are playing an
important role in the development of theregional economy and
social progress. By the end of 2001, the number of
professional and technical personnel in the enterprises and
institutions of the whole region reached 385,100. During the
50-odd years since the founding of New China, Xinjiang has
achieved 7,102 significant sci-tech findings, of which 201
have won national awards. The technical popularization of
Xinjiang's merino sheep has attained the advanced level in
China, while the region's technology of desert highway
construction is in the forefront of the world.
Culture and art prospering.
Before the founding of New China, there was not a single
professional theatrical troupe, artistic research
organization or art school in Xinjiang. By 2001, there were
altogether 89 theatrical troupes, 107 art research and
creation units and an abundance of art schools. The Uygur,
Kazak, Hui, Kirgiz, Mongolian, Tajik and Xibe ethnic
minorities now all have their own professional theatrical
troupes and have produced agalaxy of outstanding artists.
Before the founding of New China, Xinjiang had no public
library or museum to speak of. Today, it boasts 81 public
libraries and 23 museums. In recent years, radio and
television have advanced in seven-league boots. Currently,
there are 41 radio transmission and relay stations, and 826
television transmission and relay stations. Radio reaches
91.3% ofXinjiang's population, and 90.93% have access to
television. Literary and artistic creation is flourishing.
The Rainbow of the Tianshan Mountains, Pioneers of Muqam and
a spate of other outstanding artworks have won national
awards. The full-length song-and-dance ensemble Bravo
Xinjiang has caused a great stir throughout the country. A
number of literary and artistic works with strong ethnic
characteristics have been well received nationwide and even
abroad. The genres and number of titles of books, newspapers
and magazines have doubled or redoubled. The number of
newspapers increased from 4 in 1952 to 98 in 2001, of which
43 were published in local ethnic-minority languages.
Health work improving rapidly.
In 1949, Xinjiang had only 54 medical centers, with 696
hospital beds in total. For every ten thousand people there
were on average only 1.6 hospital beds and 0.19 doctor.
Besides, health organizations were all concentrated in a few
cities or towns. But in 2001, there were 7,309 health
organizations of various types, of which 1,357 were
hospitals of various types. There were 11 hospitals at the
level of Grade III or above, and a total of 71,000 hospital
beds. On average, for every ten thousand people there were
35.1 hospital beds. In addition, there were 97,500
professional medical workers, of whom 33,600 were of
ethnic-minority origin. The average number of doctors per
thousand people, the average number of beds in town and
township clinics per thousand rural people, and the number
of medical workers in towns and townships were all above the
nationalaverage levels. A three-tier medical-care and
disease-prevention network at the levels of county, township
and village has been preliminarily formed in the
agricultural and pastoral areas. Today,all the 85 counties
(cities) of the region have hospitals, sanitation and
anti-epidemic stations, and health centers for women and
children. Each township has a hospital, and each villagea
clinic. No longer is there a shortage of doctors and
medicine, or neglected patients in the agricultural and
pastoral areas. The medical treatment level has been greatly
enhanced. Major hospitalsat the regional or prefectural
level are equipped with modern medical instruments, and the
medical branches they can offer for disease treatment have
grown more complete. Many difficult and complicated
illnesses can be treated within the region, which has 207
sanitation and anti-epidemic stations, and 17 prevention and
control centers (stations) specializing in the treatment of
endemic diseases. Endemic and contagious diseases that
afflicted people of all ethnic groups in the past have been
basically wiped out. The immunization ratio, based on
regional, county (city) and township (town) plans, has
reached 85%, and the incidence of infectious diseases has
been markedly lowered. Under the care of the central
government, the region has carried out programs to improve
water quality and prevent diseases on a large scale, and
made great achievements in these fields. The population
benefited by the improvement of water quality has topped 8.5
million, of whom the population enjoying piped water has
reached 8.1 million. Special attention has also been paid to
the work concerning the health of women and children. In the
rural areas, the ratio of adoption of modern midwifery has
reached 70% or more. The ratio ofwomen giving birth in
hospitals has reached around 50%. The coverage rate of
pregnant and lying-in women under systematic health
protection has reached 90% in urban areas and 50% in rural
areas, and that of children under systematic health
protection 70%in urban areas and 30% in rural areas. VII. The People's Living Standard and
Quality of Life Have Been Enhanced
As the economy and various
social undertakings improve, the living standard of the
people of all ethnic groups in Xinjiang is improving year by
year.
The income of both urban
and rural residents is continuously growing. In 2001, the
average net income per capita in the rural areas of Xinjiang
was 1,710.44 yuan, which was more than what was needed for
food and clothing. The average annual salary of an urban
employee was 10,278 yuan. Urban residents, as a whole, led
comfortable lives.
The
consumption structure of local residents is improving
steadily. In Xinjiang, the Engel's coefficient (the food
consumption ratio) is dropping year by year. Among rural
residents,the Engel's coefficient was as high as 60.8% in
1978, but dropped to 50.4% in 2001. With regard to urban
residents, the Engel's coefficient was 57.3% in 1978, but
dropped to 35.5% in 2001.
The
number of durable consumer goods owned by local residents is
increasing rapidly. In 2001, every hundred rural households
owned, on average, 122.3 bicycles, 93.3 television sets,
22.13 washing machines and 53.1 tape-recorders, which,
compared with thefigures for 1985, represented increases of
78.4%, 830%, 950% and 610%, respectively. In 2001, every
hundred urban households owned,on average, 107.39 color
television sets, 84.47 refrigerators, 94.69 washing machines
and 41 cameras, which, compared with the figures for 1985,
showed increases of 190%, 700%, 76.7% and 330%,
respectively. Besides, they also owned 42.96 video CD
players, 18.59 video cassette-recorders, 17.33 hi-fi sets
and 15.89 mobile phones. With regard to housing, the living
space per capita in rural areas was 18.04 sq m in 2001,
which was a 2.3-fold increase over that of 1981. The living
space per capita in urban areas was 15.54 sq m in 2001,
which was an increase of 2.6 times compared to1981.
The quality of life of local
residents has been noticeably improved. The popularization
rate of education and the educationallevel have been raised.
The coverage of radio and television is wide. Cultural and
sports activities with mass participation are varied and
colorful. Much improvement has been made in medical care and
health work. People of all ethnic groups in both urban and
rural areas are leading well-off and stable lives. Life
expectancy in Xinjiang has been extended to 71.12 years. The
demography of Xinjiang shows the features of low rate of
birth, low rate of death and low rate of increase. Xinjiang
was cited as one of the four longevity areas in the world by
the International Society of Natural Medication in 1985. The
number of centenarians per million of Xinjiang's population
ranks first in the country. VIII. Upholding
Equality and Unity Among Ethnic Groups, and Freedom of
Religious Belief
Since the
founding of the People's Republic of China, the Chinese
government, to ensure equality and unity among ethnic groups
and achieve their common development, has formulated a
series of ethnic and religious policies on the basis of the
actualsituations of the various ethnic groups and religions,
and these policies have been continuously enriched and
improved in practice.Xinjiang, as one of the areas
practicing regional autonomy for ethnic minorities in China,
has fully implemented the ethnic and religious policies laid
down by the central government, safeguarded the fundamental
interests of the people of all ethnic groups, and formed,
developed and consolidated a new type of relationship of
equality, unity and mutual assistance among ethnicgroups.
Safeguarding equality among
ethnic groups and promoting their unity. It is stipulated in
the Constitution of the People's Republic of China as
follows: "All ethnic groups in the People's Republic of
China are equal. The state protects the lawful rights and
interests of the ethnic minorities and upholds and develops
a relationship of equality, unity and mutual assistance
among all ofChina's ethnic groups. Discrimination against
and oppression of any ethnic group are prohibited; any act
which undermines the unity of the ethnic groups or
instigates division is prohibited."
The Constitution ensures that
citizens of all ethnic groups enjoy all the rights of
equality prescribed by the Constitution and the law.
Citizens who have reached the age of 18 have the right to
vote and stand for election, regardless of ethnic
status,race, sex or religious belief; freedom of the person
and the personal dignity of citizens of all ethnic groups
are inviolable; all ethnic groups have the right to enjoy
freedom of religious belief; citizens of all ethnic groups
have the right to receive education; and all ethnic groups
have the freedom to use and develop their own spoken and
written languages. The government hasadopted various special
policies and measures to ensure that all the rights of
equality for all ethnic groups as prescribed by the
Constitution and the law are effectively implemented and
protectedin social life and government behavior.
After the founding of the
People's Republic of China, the localgovernment of Xinjiang
promulgated an administrative order to abolish appellations
and names of places containing meanings insulting to ethnic
minorities. For instance, the place name of
"Dihua" was changed to "Urumqi," and
that of "Zhenxi" to "Barkol." Some
appellations, though not implying insults, were also changed
at the wish of the given ethnic minority. For instance, the
name "Dahur" was changed to "Daur" in
1958, in accordance with the wish of the Daur people.
In order to further
consolidate and develop the great unity among ethnic groups,
since 1983, the government of the region has launched an
"educational month of unity among ethnic groups"
throughout the whole region every year. In a lively and
up-to-dateform, the publicity and educational event is
carried out in a concentrated, extensive and profound
manner, to promote the concepts of equality, unity and
progress as the primary principlesin the relationships
between ethnic groups, and make mutual trust,mutual respect,
mutual learning, mutual support and mutual understanding
social norms to be routinely followed by people of all
ethnic groups.
Ethnic
minorities' right to autonomy is protected by laws and
regulations. According to the Constitution, regional
autonomy is practiced in areas where people of ethnic
minorities live in compact communities. This is one of the
basic political systems ofChina. The Xinjiang Uygur
Autonomous Region is an ethnic autonomous area with the
Uygur people as its principal body. Within the territory of
the autonomous region, there also exist other areas where
other ethnic minorities live in compact communities. There,
corresponding ethnic autonomous areas have also been
established. Currently, the whole region has 5 autonomous
prefectures for 4 ethnic groups -- Kazak, Hui, Kirgiz and
Mongolian; 6 autonomous counties for 5 ethnic groups --
Kazak,Hui, Mongolian, Tajik and Xibe; and 43 ethnic
townships.
According to the
provisions of China's Constitution and the "Law on
Regional Ethnic Autonomy," ethnic autonomous areas
enjoy extensive autonomy. While exercising the functions and
powers of local state organs, they shall have the power of
legislation; the power to flexibly carry out or decide not
to carry out decisions from higher-level state organs that
are not suited to the actual conditions of the ethnic
autonomous areas; the power to develop their own economy;
the power to manage their own financial affairs;the power to
train and use ethnic-minority cadres; and the power to
develop education and ethnic cultures. The People's Congress
ofthe Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region and its standing
committee have adopted various regulations and resolutions
which fit the characteristics and meet the requirements of
Xinjiang based on thepower accorded to it by the "Law
on Regional Ethnic Autonomy" and Xinjiang's actual
conditions, thus protecting the right to autonomy granted to
ethnic autonomous areas by the law. By the endof 2000, the
people's congress of the autonomous region and its standing
committee had altogether enacted 119 local laws and 71
statutory resolutions and decisions, approved 31 local laws,
3 separate regulations formulated by local people's
congresses and 173 administrative rules and regulations
formulated by the government of the autonomous region.
Chief leaders of ethnic
autonomous areas are citizens of the ethnic group or groups
exercising regional autonomy in the area concerned. As
stipulated by the Constitution, the head of an autonomous
region, autonomous prefecture or autonomous county shall be
a citizen of the ethnic group exercising regional autonomy
in the area concerned; and the other members of the people's
governments of these regions, prefectures and counties shall
include members of the ethnic group exercising regional
autonomy as well as members of other ethnic minorities. In
order to thoroughly safeguard regional ethnic autonomy and
the various rights of the ethnic minorities, Xinjiang places
great importance on creating study and training
opportunities for ethnic-minority cadres, sending large
numbers of ethnic-minority cadres to study in colleges and
universities in inland provinces, running schools and
training classes for ethnic-minority cadres at various
levels in Xinjiang, and thus training and fostering a large
body of administrative and professional ethnic-minority
cadres for work inpolitical, economic, cultural and other
spheres. In 1950, there were only 3,000 ethnic-minority
cadres in Xinjiang. In 1955, when the Xinjiang Uygur
Autonomous Region was established, there were 46,000
ethnic-minority cadres. Today, there are as many as
348,000,accounting for 51.8% of the total number of cadres
in the autonomous region. Meanwhile, the number of women
ethnic-minority cadres has exceeded 46% of the total number
of women cadres in thewhole
region.
Ethnic minorities enjoy
full representation rights in people's congresses at all
levels. In order to thoroughly protect the rights of the
ethnic minorities, the proportions of the ethnic-minority
deputies to people's congresses at all levels are all
approximately four percentage points higher than the
proportions of the ethnic-minority populations in the total
populations of therelevant areas in Xinjiang in the
corresponding periods. The proportions of ethnic-minority
deputies in the total number of Xinjiang's deputies to the
National People's Congress of all previous terms have all
exceeded 63% -- all higher than the proportions of such
ethnic populations in the region's total population in the
corresponding periods.
Ethnic
minorities' freedom and right to use and develop their own
spoken and written languages are fully respected and
protected.The government of the autonomous region
promulgated, respectively in 1988 and 1993, the
"Provisional Regulations of Administration for the Use
of Ethnic Languages in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous
Region" and the "Regulations for Work Concerning
Spoken and Written Languages in the Xinjiang Uygur
Autonomous Region," which further enshrine in legal
form the freedom and right of ethnic minorities to use and
develop their own spoken and written languages. Whether in
the fields of judicature, administration, education, etc.,
or in political and social life, the spoken and written
languages of ethnic minorities are broadly used. Government
organs of the autonomous region simultaneously use two or
more spoken and written languages in handling public
affairs. Government organs of autonomous prefectures and
counties also simultaneously use the spoken and written
languages of the ethnic group exercising regional autonomy
in handling public affairs. Ethnic minorities have the right
to use their own spoken and written languages in election
and litigation. Spoken and written languages of ethnic
minorities are widely used in journalism, publications,
radio, film and television. The Xinjiang People's
Broadcasting Station uses five languages, namely, Uygur,
Han, Kazak, Mongolian and Kirgiz, while the Xinjiang
Television Stationuses the Uygur, Han and Kazak languages.
The Uygur, Han, Kazak, Kirgiz, Mongolian and Xibe have
newspapers, books and magazines available to them in their
own languages.
Ethnic
minorities' folkways and customs are fully respected. Ethnic
minorities' folkways and customs are closely related to
people's production and life, as well as religious beliefs.
To respect ethnic minorities' folkways and customs, the
central and regional people's governments have promulgated a
number of regulations. To guarantee the supply of special
food needed by ethnic minorities, Muslims in particular, the
people's government has promulgated regulations and taken a
sequence of specific measures, for instance by requiring
large and medium-sized cities and small towns with sizable
Muslim populations to have a definitenumber of Muslim
restaurants. At the communication hubs and in units with
Muslim employees, Muslim canteens or Muslim catering must be
provided. Beef and mutton supplied to Muslims must be
slaughtered and processed according to Islamic customs, and
must be separately stored, transported and sold. On their
respective traditional festivals, such as the Kurban
Festival and Fast-breaking Festival, all ethnic minorities
may enjoy statutory holidays and be supplied with special
festive food. Ethnic minorities which traditionally practice
inhumation are exempt fromthe government requirement of
cremation, and are allotted special land for cemeteries.
There are no restrictions whatever on folkways and customs
of a religious nature, such as wedding or funeral
ceremonies, circumcision and giving religious names.
Ethnic minorities' educational
level is continuously rising. Since the founding of the
People's Republic of China, to change the extremely backward
situation in education among the ethnic minorities, a whole
array of measures have been adopted. The development of
education among ethnic minorities has been regardedas one of
the priorities of educational work. Focus and priority of
arrangement and support have been given to the education of
ethnic minorities in terms of development program, fund
input, andteacher training. To change the backward
educational situation of the ethnic minorities in pastoral
areas, huge amounts of funds have been spent on establishing
boarding schools; grants are available for particularly poor
students in boarding schools, middle schools, polytechnic
schools, colleges and universities. In2002, for instance,
free textbooks with a value of 12 million yuanand grants
totaling 30 million yuan were given to such boarding
schools. Secondary and primary school students covered by
the compulsory education period in the three prefectures of
Hotan, Kashi and Aksu and the Kirgiz Autonomous Prefecture
of Kizilsu in southern Xinjiang, where ethnic minorities
live in compact communities, enjoy free education. The
compulsory education periodis extended so as to enable
ethnic-minority students to receive 9 to 12 years of
compulsory education. Tuition and fees and expenditures for
textbooks are waived for primary and middle school students
of ethnic-minority origins in some border and poorcounties.
A total of 5,882 primary and middle schools serve
ethnicminorities in Xinjiang, accounting for 69% of the
total number of primary and middle schools in the region. At
the same time, many schools practice a mixed enrolment of
students of ethnic-minority and Han origins. Today, the
whole region has formed an educationalsystem for ethnic
minorities which is rational in structure, multi-level and
developing in a coordinated way. By the end of 2001,
theenrolment rate of school-age children had reached 97.41%
for primary schools and 82.02% for junior middle schools. At
the college entrance examination, a preferential policy is
implemented,whereby the entrance mark has been specially
lowered for ethnic-minority students according to the actual
circumstances of the students' sources.
Ethnic minorities' traditional
culture is protected and flourishing. The people of all
ethnic groups in Xinjiang have created a long-standing,
varied and colorful traditional culture, making a unique
contribution to the cultural development of the Chinese
nation. The government of the autonomous region has, in a
planned way, organized specialists for work involving the
collecting, editing, translating and publishing of the
cultural heritage of ethnic minorities and the protection of
their famous historical monuments, scenic spots, rare
cultural relics and otherimportant items of historical and
cultural heritage. Since 1984, the regional office in charge
of the collection and publishing of ethnic minorities'
ancient books has collected more than 5,000 titles of such
works, edited and published more than 100 titles. Two
colossal works, Kutadgu Bilig (Wisdom of Fortune and Joy)
and A Comprehensive Turki Dictionary, of the Karahan Kingdom
period inthe 11th century, which had been on the verge of
being lost, were translated into the Uygur language and
published, and then translated into the Han language and
published in the 1980s with the support of the government
and the long-term concerted efforts of specialists of
various ethnic groups. Tremendous achievements have been
made in collecting, editing, translating and researchingthe
Janger of the Mongolians and the Manas of the Kirgiz, two of
China's three important epics of ethnic minorities. The
Twelve Muqams opera, a classical musical treasure of the
Uygur people, which was also on the way out before the
founding of New China, has long been an artistic form on the
top of the list for rescue by the local government of
Xinjiang, which has mobilized efforts for collecting and
editing works of this genre. Half a century ago,only two or
three elderly musicians could sing it completely. But now it
is widely sung, following the establishment of the Muqam Art
Troupe and Muqam Research Office in Xinjiang. Traditional
local sports with a long history are flourishing. Items like
"picking up a sheep while riding a galloping
horse," horse racing, wrestling and archery are again
becoming popular among the local people. The Darwaz (Uygur
tightrope walking at high altitude) is now widely known both
at home and
abroad.
Implementing a more
liberal childbirth policy for ethnic minorities than for the
Han people. Based on the state family planning policy, the
People's Congress of the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region
has, according to the region's actual circumstances,
formulated the "Provisional Regulations for Family
Planning of Ethnic Minorities in the Xinjiang Uygur
Autonomous Region" to implement a more liberal
childbirth policy for ethnic minorities than for the Han
people and promote the growth of the population of ethnic
minorities, which enables the natural population growth of
ethnic minorities in Xinjiang to increase at a higher rate
than that of the local Han people. In 2001, the natural
population growth of ethnic minorities was 13.04, whereas
that of the Han was 8.25. The first national census,
conducted in 1953, showed that the combined population of
ethnic minorities in Xinjiang was 4.54 million. When the
fifth national census was conducted, in 2000, the figure had
risen to 10.9696 million.
Freedom of religious belief is
respected and protected. Most people belonging to ethnic
minorities in Xinjiang hold one religious belief or another.
In the case of certain ethnic minorities, religions are
followed on a mass scale. For instance the Uygur, Kazak and
Hui believe in Islam, and the Mongolian, Xibeand Daur
believe in Buddhism. The right to freedom of religious
belief for various ethnic groups is fully respected, and all
normal religious activities are protected by law. Now, there
are more than 24,000 venues for religious activities in
Xinjiang, of which 23,753 are Islamic mosques. There are
26,800 clerical persons, of whom 26,500 are of the Islamic
faith. Every year, the government allocates specialized
funds for the maintenance and repair of the key mosques,
monasteries and churches. In 1999 alone,7.6 million yuan was
allocated by the central government for the reconstruction
of the Yanghang Mosque in Urumqi, the Baytulla Mosque in
Yining and the Jamae Mosque in Hotan.
Religious personages enjoy
full rights to participate in the deliberation and
administration of state affairs. Currently, more than 1,800
religious personages in Xinjiang have been elected to posts
in people's congresses and committees of the Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) at all
levels, of whom1 is in the National People's Congress, 4 in
the National Committee of the CPPCC, 21 in the people's
congress of the autonomous region, and 27 in the Regional
Committee of the CPPCC. They take the initiative in
participating in deliberation and administration of state
affairs on behalf of religious believers, and in exercising
supervision over the government in respect to the
implementation of the policy of freedom of religious belief.
To ensure the normal handling of religious affairs by
religious personages, the government grants stipends to
those who are in financial difficulties.
Protecting the legal rights
and interests of religious organizations in accordance with
the law. Since 1982, a total of 88 religious organizations
have been reinstated or established in the autonomous
region, of which 1 Islamic association and 1 Buddhist
association are at the regional level; 13 Islamic
associations, 3 Buddhist associations and 1 Three-Self
Patriotic Movement Committee of the Protestant Churches are
at the prefectural (prefectural-class city) level; 65
Islamic associations, 2 Buddhist associations and 2
Three-Self Patriotic Movement Committees of the Protestant
Churches are at the county (county-class city) level. All
religious bodies independently carryout religious activities
within the scope prescribed by law. All religious bodies
play an important role in training, fostering, educating and
administering their clergy and establishing and running
religious schools, as well as in international religious
exchanges.
In order to ensure
the normal operation of religious activities,Xinjiang has
established an Islamic college specializing in training
senior clergymen. Islamic bodies in prefectures and
prefectural-level cities have opened Islamic classes to
train clergymen in accordance with actual needs. To enhance
religious personages' level of learning, train a contingent
of high-caliber religious personages, and establish a
three-tiered (regional, prefectural and county) training
system, the government has allocated funds to train
in-service clerical persons in rotation, and organized
investigative tours for religious personages so as to
broaden their vistas and enrich their knowledge.
Religious personages are
guaranteed access to scriptures and other religious
publications. A number of Islamic classics and religious
books and magazines, including the Koran, Selected Worksof
Waez and A New Collection of Waez's Speeches, as well as the
religious classics of Buddhism, Christianity and other
religions in various editions and in the Uygur, Kazak and
Han languages havebeen translated, published and distributed
in Xinjiang. China's Muslims, a journal in the Uygur and Han
languages, is widely read.For religious believers'
convenience, stores specializing in selling religious
publications have been set up in various parts of Xinjiang
with government endorsement.
Normal religious activities
are protected by law. The government of the autonomous
region has formulated and promulgatedthe "Provisional
Regulations for the Administration of Religious Activity
Venues in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region" and
otherregulations in accordance with the Constitution and the
law. Religious believers carry out normal religious
activities in line with the canons and rituals of their
respective faiths, under the protection of the law. In
recent years, the reincarnation of Living Buddhas has been
successfully completed; tens of thousands of Muslims have
made pilgrimages to Mecca as their living standards have
improved; and students of Muslim colleges have taken part
with great success in competitions for recitation of the
Koran held both at home and
abroad. IX. Establishment, Development
and Role of the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps
The Xinjiang Production and
Construction Corps (XPCC), established in 1954, assumes the
duties of cultivating and guarding the frontier areas
entrusted to it by the state. It is a special social
organization, which handles its own administrative and
judicial affairs within the reclamation areas under its
administration, in accordance with the laws and regulations
of thestate and the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region and
with economic planning directly supervised by the state. It
is subordinated to the dual leadership of the central
government and the People's Government of the Xinjiang Uygur
Autonomous Region. Also known as the China Xinjian Group,
the XPCC has 14 divisions (reclamation areas), 174
regimental agricultural and stockbreeding farms,
4,391industrial, construction, transport and commercial
enterprises, and well-run social undertakings covering
scientific research, education, culture, health, sports,
finance and insurance, as wellas judiciary organs. The total
population of the XPCC is 2,453,600,including 933,000
workers.
The XPCC was
established against a special historical background. In
1949, Xinjiang was peacefully liberated. To consolidate
border defense, accelerate Xinjiang's development, andreduce
the economic burden on local governments and the local
people of all ethnic groups, the People's Liberation Army
units stationed in Xinjiang focused their efforts on
production and construction, starting large-scale production
and construction projects. By 1954, after making arduous
pioneering and enterprising efforts, 34 farms and eight
pastures had been constructed, with a total cultivated area
of 77,200 ha. The farming and stockbreeding products
gathered not only provided for the logistic needs of the
troops stationed in Xinjiang, but the PLA units had also set
up a number of modern industrial, mining and commercial
enterprises, as well as schools, hospitals and other
institutions.
In October 1954,
the Central People's Government ordered most of the PLA
units in Xinjiang to be transferred to local civilian work
by the unit, and be separated from the setups of national
defense forces to form a production and construction corps,
whose missions were to carry out both production and militia
duties, andcultivate and guard border areas. Starting from
May 1956, the XPCCwas subordinated to the dual leadership of
the Ministry of State Farms and Land Reclamation and the
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.
China has a centuries-old
tradition of developing and protecting its border areas by
stationing troops to cultivate and guard the frontier areas.
According to historical records, all thedynasties in Chinese
history adopted the practice of stationing troops to
cultivate and guard frontier areas as an important
statepolicy for developing border areas and consolidating
frontier defense. The beginning of this practice by the
central authoritieson a massive scale in Xinjiang can be
traced back to the Western Han Dynasty, to be subsequently
carried on from generation to generation. This policy had
played an important historical role inuniting the nation,
consolidating frontier defense and promoting social and
economic development in Xinjiang. The decision of the
Central People's Government of the People's Republic of
China in 1954 to establish the Xinjiang Production and
Construction Corps represented a continuation and
development of this historical experience in the new
historical conditions.
The
XPCC grew in strength through arduous pioneering efforts.
Since its founding, the XPCC has taken it upon itself to
reclaim land, guard the border areas and work for the
well-being of the people of all ethnic groups in Xinjiang.
It has followed the line of combining the efforts of
workers, farmers, merchants, students and soldiers; overall
development of agriculture, forestry, animalhusbandry,
sideline production and fisheries; and comprehensive
operation of industry, communications, commerce,
construction and services.
In
the 1950s and early 1960s, following the principle of
"not competing for benefits with the local
people," the XPCC built water conservancy works and
reclaimed wasteland along the edges ofthe Taklimakan and
Gurbantnggt deserts to the north and south of the Tianshan
Mountains, respectively, and along the borders where the
natural environment was adverse. Now they have built up
ecologically sound economic networks of oases, with
contiguous fields, crisscrossing canals, ubiquitous forest
belts and radiating roads. Starting by processing
agricultural and sideline products, the XPCC developed
modern industry and gradually formed a multi-sector
industrial system with light and textile industriesas the
main part and supplemented by iron and steel, coal, building
materials, electricity, chemicals and machinery industries.
With these projects in full swing, the XPCC saw its
education, science and technology, culture and other
undertakings follow suit. By the end of 1966, all the XPCC's
undertakings had developed to a rather high level.
The XPCC was dissolved in
1975, but in December 1981 the central government decided to
revive it. Then the XPCC started itspioneering work once
again, entering a new era of construction anddevelopment. By
2001, the XPCC had built a maze of irrigation works,
sandbreaks and forest belts, rigged up a green barrier
totaling several thousand km in length, created new oases
with a total area of 1.064 million ha, brought into
existence a number ofnew towns such as Shihezi and Wujiaqu,
and reaped a GDP that accounted for 13.2% of the autonomous
region's total.
The XPCC has
played an important role in maintaining the development of
Xinjiang. In the past several decades, while payingtaxes to
local governments as required by the law, the XPCC's
regimental agricultural and stockbreeding farms and
industrial, transportation, construction and commercial
enterprises have adhered to their aim of serving the people
of all ethnic groups inXinjiang, and actively aided the
construction of local areas. Eachyear, they send batches of
technicians to adjacent counties, townships and villages to
give training courses in growing crops and operating and
repairing farm machinery, and to spread
advancedtechnologies. Since 1964, they have pooled funds
each year to aid the local areas in planning and
construction, and offered medical aid to people of all
ethnic groups, as well as help in many other aspects. To
support industrial development in Xinjiang, the XPCC has
transferred gratis a batch of large, well-developed
industrial,transportation, construction and commercial
enterprises to the local areas, making great contributions
to the modernization efforts of
Xinjiang.
As an important force
for stability in Xinjiang and for consolidating frontier
defense, the XPCC adheres to the principle of attaching
equal importance to production and militia duties. Ithas set
up in frontier areas a "four-in-one" system of
joint defense that links the PLA, the Armed Police, the XPCC
and the ordinary people, playing an irreplaceable special
role in the pastfive decades in smashing and resisting
internal and external separatists' attempts at sabotage and
infiltration, and in maintaining the stability and safety of
the borders of the motherland.
During the process of
cultivating and guarding the border areas,the XPCC has
established a close relationship with local governments. The
XPCC conscientiously accepts the leadership of the People's
Government of the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, abides
by the laws and regulations of the government, respects
thecustoms and religious beliefs of ethnic minorities,
strives to do practical things in the interest of the people
of all ethnic groups in Xinjiang, and endeavors to develop a
blending type of economy. In this way, the XPCC has forged
flesh-and-blood ties with people of all ethnic groups in
Xinjiang, and attained the aimof joint frontier defense,
sharing of resources, mutual complementarity and common
prosperity.
The development of
the XPCC in turn has continuously received aid and support
from governments at all levels in the autonomous region, and
from people of all ethnic groups. In its initial period of
land reclamation, people of all ethnic groups provided the
XPCC with guides, production tools and other forms of aid,
while local governments allocated large plots of state-owned
wasteland and pastureland, mines and natural forests, which
laid the foundation for the development of the XPCC. Many of
the policies formulated by the autonomous regional people's
governmentsince the reform and opening-up have been
expressly suitable for the XPCC and have thus gone a long
way toward promoting the harmonious development between the
XPCC and local economies.
During its long years of
development, the XPCC has become a mosaic of people from 37
ethnic groups, including the Han, Uygur, Kazak, Hui and
Mongolian. In the reclamation areas live Muslims, Buddhists,
Protestants and Catholics. The population of Muslims isover
250,000. Carrying out the central government's policies
toward ethnic groups and religions in an all-round way, the
XPCC handles religious affairs in accordance with the law,
and has become a large, united, multi-ethnic family.
The development of the XPCC in
the past five decades has playeda very important role in
accelerating the economic development of Xinjiang, promoting
unity among ethnic groups, maintaining social stability,
consolidating border defense, and shoring up the unification
of the motherland. X. State Support
for the Development of Xinjiang
Since the founding of New
China in 1949, according to the Constitution of the People's
Republic of China, the central government has made it a
basic state policy to help ethnic minorities-inhabited
border areas with their political, economic and cultural
development, and to lead all the ethnic groups of China onto
the road to common prosperity.
Increased investment in fixed
assets in Xinjiang. In the 10 five-year plans of the central
government, infrastructure construction projects, projects
involving basic agricultural development and modern
industrial construction projects in Xinjiang have always
been listed as key state projects. A whole slue of
preferential and special policies have been adopted to
ensure the smooth implementation of these plans. During the
half century or more since the founding of New China, with
energetic state support, investment and construction have
been proceeding ina big way in Xinjiang. From 1950 to 2001,
investment in fixed assets there added up to 501.515 billion
yuan. That included 266.223 billion yuan from the central
government, accounting for 53.1%of such investment in the
corresponding period. Over 90,000 projects have been
completed and put into operation, including 178 large and
medium-sized projects, and a batch of projects having a
vital bearing on the economic development of Xinjiang. All
these have laid a firm foundation for the autonomous
region's sustainedeconomic growth.
Sizable financial support for
Xinjiang. Preliminary statistics show that from 1955, when
the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region wasfounded, till 2000,
the financial subsidies Xinjiang received fromthe central
government totaled 87.741 billion yuan. Especially since
1996, with the increase of the central government's
financial strength and the implementation of the great
western development strategy, the regular financial
subsidies Xinjiang receives from the central government have
increased year by year: 5.907 billion yuan in 1996, 6.838
billion yuan in 1997, 8.012 billion yuan in 1998, 9.4
billion yuan in 1999, 11.902 billion yuan in 2000, and
18.382 billion yuan in 2001. The central government has also
increased its fund input and support of other forms through
all kinds of special financial transfer payment as well as
financial transfer payment under the preferential policy for
ethnic minorities.
Support for
the government of the autonomous region in activelyusing
loans from international financial organizations and
foreigngovernments. By the end of 2001, with support from
and arrangementby the central government, Xinjiang had
completed or was in the process of undertaking 22 projects
with loans from the World Bank,and the total investment had
reached US$ 1.79895 billion, or 14.93128 billion yuan RMB
according to the current exchange rate. Three Sino-foreign
joint ventures have obtained approval to use US$5.524
million in loans from the Asian Development Bank. Loans
totaling US$ 410.67 million from Canada and several other
countries and their governmental financial organizations
have beenused in 68 projects in Xinjiang, some of which have
been completed.Loans from international organizations and
foreign governments, which have been made full use of, have
played an important and positive role in Xinjiang's economic
development.
Benefiting
Xinjiang by exploiting petroleum and natural gas. Xinjiang
is rich in petroleum and natural gas resources. Since
thefounding of New China, to promote Xinjiang's economic
development,the central government has adhered to the policy
of large-scale prospecting for, exploitation of and
investment in petroleum and natural gas resources in
Xinjiang, so as to bring benefits to people of all ethnic
groups in Xinjiang. To realize the strategic plan of
building Xinjiang into China's largest petrochemical
industry base, the central government had increased
investment in prospecting for and exploiting petroleum and
natural gas in Xinjiang year by year, in spite of the fact
that the domestic and international prices of petroleum and
natural gas had dropped, andthe cost of prospecting for and
exploiting petroleum and natural gas was high. The
investment in this respect was 18.196 billion yuan in 1995,
and 29.223 billion yuan in 2000. An investment to the tune
of well over 120 billion yuan is planned for the project of
"transporting western natural gas eastward,"
which, with Xinjiang as the main source, is already well on
the way.
The rapid development
of the petroleum, natural gas and petrochemical industry has
met the demand of Xinjiang's economic development for energy
and petrochemicals. It has also given strong impetus to the
development of the machine-building, transportation,
telecommunications, construction, electricity, water
conservancy, food, textiles, chemicals, plastics, rubber
andpharmaceuticals industries, as well as agriculture;
stimulated thegrowth of service trades; and produced a great
impact on the formation and improvement of Xinjiang's
regional economic structure. As a result, there has been a
great increase in the numbers of people employed. Since
1994, with the operation of the Tarim Oilfield, the annual
increase of employment in the MongolianAutonomous Prefecture
of Bayingolin alone has exceeded 18%. Meanwhile, the process
of urbanization has revved up. New oil-producing cities have
mushroomed on the barren sands of the Gobi Desert, such as
Karamay, Dushanzi (Maytag), Fudong and Zepu (Poskam). The
modernization drive is going ahead apace in such cities as
Urumqi, Korla, Fukang and Luntai. Local economic development
has been effectively supported. The large oilfields
inXinjiang, such as Karamay, Tuha and Tarim, and major
petrochemicalenterprises in Zepu, Dushanzi, Urumqi and
Karamay, fully using their human resources and financial and
technological advantages, have aided local enterprises and
invested in local construction. The Desert Petroleum
Highway, which runs from north to south across the
Taklimakan Desert, was built with an investment of 785
million yuan from the Tarim Oilfield. The development of the
petroleum, natural gas and petrochemical industries in
Xinjiang has boosted Xinjiang's revenues considerably. The
project of "transporting western natural gas
eastward" alone will increase Xinjiang's yearly revenue
by over one billion yuan, making a greatcontribution to
promoting the development of various undertakings in the
autonomous region.
Making
preferential policies to promote Xinjiang's
development.Since the founding of New China, and especially
since the reform and opening-up started some 20 years ago,
the central government has drawn up economic development and
other policies tilted in favor of Xinjiang. Relevant
regulations on the strategy of openingup the border areas
have been promulgated, providing eight preferential policies
for enlarging the opening-up of the western areas, including
Xinjiang. The central government also encourages the
construction of grain and cotton production bases in
Xinjiang,the building of shelter-forests in northern,
northeastern and northwestern China, and the construction of
desertification control projects. The central government
requires that preferential policies for aiding economic
development in the impoverished areas be carried out; border
highways be built and supportive highway facilities at
border checkpoints improved; comprehensive control of the
ecosystem and water resources of the Tarim River be
accelerated, with priority given to Xinjiang when arranging
projects for exploiting resources and infrastructure
construction; standard transfer payment system be adopted
for the central budget, to gradually strengthen financial
support and increase the proportion of state policy-based
loans, loans from international financial organizations and
those from foreign governments. In 2001, the central
government promulgated the "Notice of Opinions on the
Implementation of Some Policies and Measures for the Great
Development of China's West," which provided 68
concrete preferential policies in 18 aspects. According to
these provisions, the government of the autonomous region
formulated and promulgated the "Suggestions of the
XinjiangUygur Autonomous Region on Issues Concerning the
Preferential Tax Policy in the Great Development of China's
West," providing 10 concrete preferential tax policies
to attract domestic and international enterprises, as well
as farmers and herdsmen to participate in investing in and
operating projects concerning Xinjiang's social
infrastructure, eco-environmental protection, high-tech
industry and industries with special potentials and local
characteristics.
Dispatching
and training first-class professional and technicalpersonnel
for Xinjiang. Since the founding of New China, considering
Xinjiang's remoteness, backwardness and shortage of
high-caliber personnel, the state has assigned, transferred
or encouraged over 800,000 intellectuals and professional
and technical personnel from inland regions to work in
Xinjiang. Largenumbers of university graduates, scientists,
technicians and highly-trained professionals have been
assigned to Xinjiang. Working in such fields as industry,
agriculture, education, culture, scientific research,
medical care and health, such peoplehave made outstanding
contributions to the modernization of Xinjiang.
Since 1989, with arrangements
made by the central government, more than 80 institutions of
higher learning in the hinterland have extended their
support to Xinjiang by enrolling from among Xinjiang's
ethnic minorities 10,000 university and junior college
students, 640 post-graduate students for specific posts or
work units, 860 teachers and education administration
personnel, and 1,400 business administration personnel, as
well as sending a numberof ethnic-minority visiting scholars
abroad for further studies. Since 2000, the 12
better-developed cities of Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin,
Nanjing, Hangzhou, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Dalian, Qingdao,
Ningbo, Suzhou and Wuxi have run special Xinjiang classes in
theirkey provincial-level senior high schools, with an
annual enrolmentof 1,540 ethnic-minority students who enjoy
local government subsidies.
Xinjiang has received strong
support from other provinces, autonomous regions and
centrally administered municipalities around China. During
the past few decades, other provinces, autonomous regions
and municipalities have provided immense amounts of aid for
Xinjiang in terms of technology and skilled people.
Considering the backwardness of the industrial enterprisesin
Xinjiang, the central government has moved some enterprises
andfactories from more developed areas along the southeast
coast to Xinjiang, transferred engineers and technicians
from the inland areas to newly established key enterprises
in Xinjiang, and sent large numbers of specially picked
ethnic-minority workers from Xinjiang to study and practice
in advanced enterprises in the inland areas, resulting in
the growth of a big contingent of leading engineers and
technicians for Xinjiang in a very short period of time.
Since the introduction of the policies of reform and
opening-up and with the gradual establishment of a socialist
market economic system, economic and technological
cooperation andexchanges, and the interflow of highly
qualified personnel betweenXinjiang and other provinces,
autonomous regions and municipalities have kept expanding. A
new market-oriented pattern of aiding Xinjiang's economic
and social development has shaped up,with capital investment
as the bond, "material and human
resourcesinterflow" as the characteristic, and mutual
complementarity as the principle. In recent years, in
particular, in conformity with the requirements of the
central government, over 20 better-developed provinces and
municipalities, including Beijing, Shanghai, Guangdong,
Shandong and Zhejiang, have paired up with and provided aid
for various prefectures and cities in Xinjiang inrelevant
fields, with fruitful results.
Conclusion
With leadership and support by
the central government, and through over 50 years of arduous
efforts by the people of all ethnic groups in Xinjiang, the
autonomous region has made historicand outstanding
achievements in its economic and social development.
However, as Xinjiang is located in China's northwest border,
with rough natural conditions and a weak economic
foundation, it is still faced with many difficulties in
developingits public undertakings, such as education,
culture and medical care and health. And there is still the
onerous task of raising the living standard of the people of
all ethnic groups. It is the common wish of the people of
all the ethnic groups in Xinjiang, aswell as the strategic
plan of the central government, to speed up Xinjiang's
development.
In 1999, the
central government made an important decision to implement
the great western development strategy, which provides arare
historical opportunity for Xinjiang's development. The
autonomous region has drawn up its 10th Five-Year Plan and a
development plan for the period up to 2010, in accordance
with thestate's general plan on implementing this strategy.
According to this plan, by 2005 the GDP of the entire region
should reach 210 billion yuan (calculated on the prices in
2000), with an annual growth rate of 9% and the GDP per
capita of over 10,000 yuan; the investment in fixed assets
should reach 420 billion yuan; the annual growth of urban
residents' disposable income per capita should reach around
7% and farmers' net income per capita should increase by 150
yuan each year; the average housing floorage per capita of
urban residents should reach 23 sq m, and the living
environment, housing quality and hygienic conditions of
rural residents should be greatly improved. It is planned
that, by 2010,the autonomous region's GDP should be at least
double that of 2000,and the people should be much better
off.
The prospects for
Xinjiang's economic and social development are bright. With
the support of the central government and other provinces,
autonomous regions and municipalities, the people of all
ethnic groups in Xinjiang, through arduous efforts, will
build their autonomous region into an even more beautiful
and prosperous place. End
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