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Abstract

Ideological extremism, political violence, and terrorism are among the major national security challenges that the People’s Republic of China is confronted with. As the events in Tibet and Xinjiang have demonstrated, Beijing’s failure to manage its ethnic and religious minorities is likely to make it vulnerable to a campaign of political unrest breaking out into violence and terrorism. This book deals with the threat to China, particularly from Islamist extremism and terrorism. Attempts by scholars to explain ethnic and religious conflicts around the world have often involved the study of root causes. They range from poverty and unemployment, discrimination, and governance issues. Contemporary discourses implicate religion as a causal factor involving arguments such as “clash of civilizations” or, as with Islam, its inherent “incompatibility with modernity.”2 While not discounting the potency of the radical interpretation of Islamic religious discourse in fuelling the contemporary wave of terrorism, this book makes an attempt to explain terrorism in China primarily as an ethno-nationalist or politico-religious conflict rooted in issues involving minority identity. The book examines the prevailing scholarship on minority issues and armed conflicts and argues that the root cause of the conflict in China, especially in Xinjiang province, is not only about religious extremism, but also about the systematic violation of basic rights and insensitivity toward minority identities by the state.

So what we have seen and what we have heard in the recent incidents in Turkistan is not the fault of passing events no matter how big and enormous. Rather, it is a spontaneous uprising and a response to the long decades of dark injustice, organized cleansing, strong deprivation, humiliating servitude and disgraceful shame, to the point that patience ran out and the matter exceed the limit. Also, this was not the first uprising carried out by the wounded Muslim people, which fights and defends to preserve their identity, to maintain their personality, to protect the honors and to cease the atheist hand of transgression from doing mischief with their creed.

—Abu Yahya al-Libi, Head, Religious Committee, Al Qaeda, October 2009.1

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Notes

  1. Samer Abboud, review of Legitimizing Modernity in Islam: Muslim Modus Vivendi and Western Modernity, by Husain Kassim, The American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences, Vol. 24, No. 1 (2005): 96.

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  2. Rebecca Givner-Forbes, ℌChina Under Threat: Jihadist Community Has China in Its Sights—Debate Brewing over Whether Rising Dragon Should Be Seen as Muslim’s Friend or Foe.ℍ The Straits Times, (August 3, 2008).

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  3. Rohan Gunaratna and Kenneth Pereire, ℌAn Al Qaeda Group Operating in China?ℍ The China and Eurasia Forum Quarterly, Vol. 4, No. 2 (2006): 58. http://www.silkroadstudies.org/new/docs/CEF/Quarterly/May_2006/GunaratnaPereire.pdf.

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  4. Dru C. Gladney, Dislocating China: Muslims, Minorities and Other Subaltern Subjects, (London: C. Hurst, 2004), 150.

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  5. Raphael Israeli, Islam in China, Religion, Ethnicity, Culture, and Politics, (Lanham: Laxington Books, 2002), 1.

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  6. Martin I. Wayne, China’s War on Terrorism: Counter-insurgency, Politics and Internal Security, (London and New York: Routledge, 2008), 10–11.

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  7. Sofia Jamil and Roderick Chia, ℌLifting the Lid off Xinjiang’s Insecurities,ℍ NTS Insight (Singapore: S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, September 2009).

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© 2010 Rohan Gunaratna, Arabinda Acharya and Wang Pengxin

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Gunaratna, R., Acharya, A., Pengxin, W. (2010). Introduction. In: Ethnic Identity and National Conflict in China. Palgrave Macmillan, New York. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230107878_1

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