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Urumqi: From riots to a beauty contest

Posted: Monday, July 13, 2009 12:07 PM
Filed Under:

 URUMQI, China – Riot-torn Urumqi is hosting a beauty contest. The streets are still swamped by riot police, the city tense and littered with the debris of the worst unrest in decades, but the contestants for the 35th Miss International Beauty Pageant have come to town.

I bumped into them at dinner on Friday. In all honesty, you couldn't miss them, since very few other people were staying at my hotel, which is a few minutes away from where nearly 200 people died just a week ago. 

They paraded along the buffet line as if already on the catwalk. I picked my way along with contestants from Turkmenistan and Vietnam dressed in their finest and minimalist evening wear.

Image: Remains of a Han Chinese car dealership after ethnic riots in Urumqi, China.
Ian Williams / NBC News
The remains a Han Chinese car dealership after ethnic riots in Urumqi, China.

The "Stans" – the former Soviet Republics – were well represented, and there were women also representing Siberia and numerous Chinese cities and regions. Prominent among the latter was a Miss Xinjiang China. One of the tallest in the contest, she wore the shortest skirt, and looked nothing like the embattled and angry Uighur woman who'd been confronting the riot police.

I asked contestants from France and Germany what it was like to be in a beauty contest in a riot-torn city.

They didn't appear to know Urumqi is a riot-torn city.

The finals are later this month, and I guess they are not likely to be quizzed too deeply on local affairs. In the meantime, according to a poster in the lobby, they will be highlighting the "beauty of Xinjiang."

Not beautiful right now

This troubled me, since the situation in Xinjiang is not very beautiful right now, and the idea of pressing ahead with a beauty contest in Muslim Xinjiang, in the aftermath of so much violence, seems almost surreal.

It reminded me of my last visit to Xinjiang, shortly before the Beijing Olympic Games last August.

In the main square of Khotan, a town on the southern Silk Road, local Han Chinese leaders had launched an Olympic lottery. There was also a stage show, in which Uighur performers sang in Chinese. It was all very crass, and very loud. It was also a Friday, the Muslim day of prayer, and the authorities had banned mosques from using loud-speakers to broadcast their call to prayer.

It doesn't get much more culturally insensitive. But, of course, that's not the way China sees it.

The Chinese government believes it has brought economic progress and prosperity to the region. They see the Uighurs as an ungrateful lot, the rioters manipulated by criminals and separatist terrorists overseas.

And there seems to be no sign that this almost colonial attitude is going to change.

Image: Riot police on the streets of Urumqi last week.
Ian Williams / NBC News
Riot police on the streets of Urumqi last week.

Open to journalists, but still murky
But unlike when Tibet blew up last year, at least we journalists were able to report, and were given pretty much free access to the worst affected areas.

"What do you think of the openness?" I was asked by a reporter from CCTV, China's state television, late last week, his camera rolling. I muttered something about all openness being good, since rumor and speculation aren't good for anybody.

It was an off-the-cuff remark, but when I thought about it afterwards, quite an accurate one. Last year the Chinese government would not allow foreign journalists into Tibet, so reporters relied heavily on bits and pieces of video and information that slipped out, often via exile or activist groups abroad, little of which could be accurately verified.

This time, the authorities were quick to cut the Internet, instant messaging and international phone lines, but within Urumqi we were pretty much allowed to do as we pleased.

Still, it was hard to get an accurate picture of the dynamics of the violence. The Uighurs were often nervous about speaking openly. We do know that it was nasty and messy and involved brutality by both sides of the ethnic divide. But a different picture would have emerged if we'd been kept out, and just relied on Uighur exile groups, and the Chinese government understood that.

We may never get an accurate break down of the identity of the almost 200 dead and hundreds of injured (the government said most were Han Chinese; the Uighurs dispute this).

What we do know is that Xinjiang was a tinderbox waiting to explode, and when the explosion came, Han Chinese and their businesses were targeted before the security forces hit back hard, as did Han Chinese vigilantes.

So the authorities were more open, but it was a clever strategy.

The only fast-ish Internet connections were in a government-run press center, inside a government-run hotel. The center also organized tours of hospitals and the worst affected areas. Two floors below, in the lobby coffee shop, a large video screen showed Michael Jackson videos non-stop. Perhaps they thought this would appeal to the foreign press (though most journalists there were only too pleased to get away from the Jackson story).

The beauty contestants might have enjoyed it, though they – and the NBC team – were staying in a different hotel.

Image: Remains of a Uighur restaurant owned by a Han Chinese businessman.
Ian Williams / NBC News
The damaged remains of a Uighur restaurant that is actually owned by a Han Chinese businessman.

Deep differences
The city of Urumqi is overwhelmingly Han Chinese these days, after years of heavy government-encouraged migration. The 9 million Uighurs now make up less than half the population of Xinjiang, their home region. And the economy is growing fast – it's a vital supplier of natural resources to the rest of China.

The Uighurs, often poorly education and with a poor command of Mandarin, complain they are being left out of this boom. And this discrimination is often a more bitter complaint than the restrictions on religion, which also run deep.

A short distance from my hotel was the wreckage of a Uighur restaurant – windows and furniture smashed, cooking equipment upended by a Han Chinese mob, seeking revenge. It was a mess.

As we looked around, a young waiter emerged from a back room. He told me the Uighur family who owned the place had sold out – to a Han Chinese businessman – just a month before the riot. So apparently, the rioters made a mistake.

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Comments

Mike,

Someone's been dutifully reciting the GOP line each and every morning.  

According to your comments, westerns are qualified professionals and people of great technical ability.  western are benevolent in "civilizing" the backward other nations.  westerns merely assist through residency, westerns are not occupiers or oppressors.  western "migrate to Australia,Newzealand, North America killing millions of aboriginal people and  developing the country FOR civilized indians".  Magnificent westerns!  

According to your comments, aboriginal people  are not developed or civilized.  Apparently, aboriginal people  are incapable of taking care of themselves, medically or technically.  aboriginal people  were never "properous" without benevolent westerns.  Without westerns, aboriginal people  cannot survive.  After all, all the doctors, engineers and no less than 50 years of civilization would disappear.  Oh dear.  Of course, aboriginal people  are weak willed -- falling prey to the distant mind controls of those evil "foreign" forces.  Poor aboriginal people !    

Thank goodness for western benevolence.  Brother, can you spare a poor aboriginal people ?

With such blatant racial/cultural prejudice, can oppression of the minority really be that far behind?

Mike, got a mirror?
Dont for a second believe China is so nice. It believes in using force against anyone who they say stands against harmony and unity. As long as China spouts the trash that unity must always be foremost in its society, China will continue striking with its fists against anyone who hopes for redress for wrongs done by the government. It is a farce that China is so concerned about its citizens. It is more concerned that righteous people will throw the communists out of power. Its elite intend to stay in power and use its fists against unarmed dissenters.
I have sent two comment regarding mike from illinois comment, where are my comments? Is msn filering or deleting it? Is that your free media? I deeply despise the MSN !!!
all the han chinese supporters are biggest liers of all if not evil they are the occupiers and uighurs can not simply survive and their kids are tortured and girls are raped by them and taken from their families to unknown places eather hanged (boys)
or sold as slaves (if you can imagine rutless mind  of chinese goverment supporting)
worst of all uighur people beeing genoside in slow motion and i will not personally wach this happening
i will speak out loud and not buy chinese goods ever even i have to pay more but at least i will make sure all chinese goods are the worst goods ever built by .
Get off this communist party crap , all China is doing is trying to keep a moderate control of 1.4 billion people , what other nation that is as old as China and with as many people can do what they have succeded to accomplish just in the last 10 years ? The answer is none ! Notice , no world power has the balls to screw with China and nobody ever will , China has its --it together and don't think for a minute is doesn't . When they have a problem , they handle it there way and it works . Who is the rest of the world to critisize ? these people wrote the book , maybe we should take heed from them , they have been around a whole lot longer than anyone else. Respect these people , they deserve it and have earned it !
It is true that China still faces many challenges when dealing with such sensitive issues.Leading a country with 56 peoples for just a few decade is never easy for the government.They did make some mistakes,but it is also unfair to ignore their efforts and achievements!
As for the riot this time,no matter how "reasonable" the cause was,the killing was obviously wrong and should be blamed.Life must be respected in the first place,right?
The task of journalists is to let people know facts rather than showing too much own judgement or emotion,especially when these opinions are not that true.
There was about 150 Hans killed to 45 Uighurs killed, almost 4 times the amount.  To say the Uighurs are the victims is an insult.  The Uighur leaders that instigated this riot should be broght to justice.

A Han
I just wanna say u don't live in China,U don't know what is real for China,Media is just media,u don't have to highlight the point of view from western media,Chinese government has its own problem,we live here,we know better than ur reporter,but in the very moment,we support our country,we know what we are doing,Han is not eveil,and Uighurs is not the way they said,everyone has right to live,Uighurs is not right,at least this time.
The Facts are clear , when we talk about the chinese government respect for PEOPLE. ZERO is the word. The Chinese governments in the last 90 years have killed and displaced millions of its citizens regardless of race , or religion. The Chinese government shows no mercy toward its own  so, dont expect them to traet others any better.  Pay attention how the chinese government has been backing the Islamic Regime occupying Iran or how they have supported the criminal  Bashir regime in Sudan, its all the same  "Birds of a feather flock togather" China is a sad state. Hope it get better in the next 100 years.
no matter what, killing people is not correct.
i am a Han people, in my opinion, it is not correct to take other people's life by voilence. if the Uighurs is not satisfied with what they are treated now, they can do whatever they want, but in case voilence is allowed.
ANCA, you can now report back to your corrupt, racist, Chinese masters that you've done your part for the party.
Tibetan, There are said to be millions of Han Chinese university graduates that cannot find appropriate jobs, do we blame the Tibetans or the Uighurs?  If not then why blame the Hans for some Uighurs who cannot find jobs?  It's like balming the whites for American black university graduates who are unemployed.  By the way, Muslim Uighurs do not own Xinjiang, they are late comers to Xinjiang compared to th Hans.
For those who still thinbk the Han chinese are occupiers or invaders, here is some history: the Hans settled in Xinjiang more than two thousand years ago, before the muslim Uighurs moved to Xinjiang 700 hundred years ago.  Why do people call the Muslim new comers as if they were the aboriginals?
i think as a journalist,u should be ashamed!
You wrote very very twisted stories about the riot happened in xinjiang.
I feel sorry for you,you are just a bigot,ignorant dog who follows stereotype.
I dont think it is rude to call you dog though.
This reporter is a biased guy. You should be shamed not to report facts about who started killings and rioting. You have lost your morale. I have been in US for a while. I have not seen many lative indians in the cities which I have studies and worked. Do you think that the Affimative actions work for American Indians? Should the US government force every company to hire those unqualified American Indians? If you are a businees owner, you will understand that is equal to forced bankruptcy. As I know, many Uighurs in Chinese companies and government are not qulified to do their jobs. They are there because the government wants to treat them well. It is a shame those Uighurs who do not receive favorable treatments started the riot and killing. If Uighurs were in US, they would do the same.  


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