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Turkey's PM Likens Ethnic Violence In China To Genocide

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  • Turkey's PM Likens Ethnic Violence In China To Genocide

    TURKEY'S PM LIKENS ETHNIC VIOLENCE IN CHINA TO GENOCIDE

    Associated Press
    07/10/09 9:00 PM EDT

    ANKARA, TURKEY -- Turkey's prime minister on Friday compared ethnic
    violence in China's Xinjiang province to genocide, escalating criticism
    of Beijing following this week's killing of at least 156 people --
    including Turkic-speaking, Muslim Uighurs.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's strong words came amid daily
    demonstrations in Turkey protesting the clashes in Xinjiang's capital
    of Urumqi between Han Chinese and minority Uighurs, who share ethnic
    and cultural bonds to Turks. Hundreds of Turks prayed for the victims
    and set Chinese flags on fire on Friday in protests in Ankara and
    Istanbul.

    "These incidents in China are as if they are genocide," said
    Erdogan. "We ask the Chinese government not to remain a spectator to
    these incidents.

    There is clearly a savagery here."

    The Chinese government has already imposed curfews and flooded the
    streets of Urumqi with security forces to avoid a repeat of the
    running street battles earlier in the week.

    Turkey itself is extremely sensitive to the use of the term "genocide."

    Armenia says 1.5 million Armenians were slain by Ottoman Turks around
    the time of World War I in what Armenians and several other nations
    recognize as the first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey vehemently
    rejects the allegation, saying that the death toll was inflated and
    that Armenians died in=2 0civil unrest as the Ottoman Empire collapsed.

    Erdogan, the leader of the Islamic-rooted government, has been urged
    by some Uighurs and opposition parties to speak up for Uighurs as he
    did for Palestinians during Israel's offensive against Gaza militants
    earlier this year.

    In late January, Erdogan stormed off a stage he shared with Israeli
    President Shimon Peres at the World Economic Forum in Davos,
    Switzerland, after telling Peres, "You kill people."

    Turkey says it is concerned about the Chinese treatment of
    Uighurs. Some Uighurs favor independence or greater autonomy for
    Xinjiang province, which takes up one-sixth of China's land mass and
    borders eight Central Asian countries. The Han -- China's ethnic
    majority -- have lately been flooding into Xinjiang as the region
    becomes more developed.

    Erdogan, however, stressed that Turkey respects China's territorial
    integrity and has no intention of interfering with that country's
    internal affairs.

    And despite the country's vocal criticism of Beijing, Turkey's Foreign
    Ministry on Friday reaffirmed Turkey's commitment to develop ties
    with China in every field.

    "Turkey gives importance to the fact that all ethnic and national
    groups be living in peace and prosperity," the Foreign Ministry said
    in a statement.

    "We expect China to provide the necessary environment of peace and
    security for Uighurs who constitute a bridge of friendship between
    China and Turkey."

    The vi olence in Urumqi began Sunday when Uighurs clashed with
    police while protesting the deaths of Uighur factory workers in
    a brawl in another part of the country. The crowd then scattered
    throughout Urumqi, attacking Han Chinese, burning cars and smashing
    windows. Riot police tried to restore order, and officials said 156
    people were killed and more than 1,100 were injured.
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