Drug Trade Growing- Uyghurs Tkaing Brunt Of It

DPRKUnderground

Junior Member
HONG KONG—Uyghur Muslim families in China’s northwestern region of Xinjiang are feeling the devastating impact of the heroin trade as drug-trafficking routes become well-established, bringing addiction, crime, and HIV/AIDS infection in their wake.

“Drug addicts are increasing now, and they are young Uyghur men and boys,” a drug-trafficking enforcement officer in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region told RFA’s Uyghur service.

“The number has increased in the past nine years...During the past two years, some Uyghur addicts have come here voluntarily,” he said. “They are mainly between the ages of 18 and over 20. There are some 17- and 16 year-old boys and there are some 15-year-old boys as well.”

“This year, there are more. We arrested a total of 70 drug addicts. Forty of the drug addicts were sent to the White House compulsory rehab center in Urumqi,” he added.

Reasons for addiction vary
He said the reasons behind the Uyghurs’ addictions varied. “Some of them were forced to take drugs while others were misled by others and encouraged to try a couple of times, and then they became addicted.”

Experts say heroin from Burma started showing up in Xinjiang in 1994. Initially, Uyghurs smoked it, but recently they have begun injecting it, creating a major AIDS crisis in the region, Justin Rudelson, executive director of the Institute for Global Chinese Affairs at the University of Maryland, told a 2002 U.S. congressional hearing on China.

“Within a drastically short time, Xinjiang has emerged as China's most seriously affected region and the Uyghurs are the most affected of all of China's peoples,” Rudelson said.

One Uyghur woman from Xinjiang, who asked that her name and location not be disclosed, described the effects of her husband’s heroin habit on their family.

Drug habit spreads
“My husband takes that stuff and injects it. He takes my motorbike and brings it back. I cannot afford to take care of my children well now,” she told RFA reporter Guljekre.

“He takes the money whenever there is some money and he also takes the things from home [to sell]. He quits for a while and goes back to it again,” she said.

“We used to have a shop and now it is closed. He stays at home and waits for me to bring food home. People find ways to get drugs and take drugs and they get it from each other. He spends his days crying. He cries every day,” she said.

“We cannot find any other way to help him, and we're just waiting for him to die. To get stoned and die. People get stoned and die often,” she said.

A police officer in Maralbeshi county in the southwestern Chinese province of Yunnan, on the trafficking route between Burma and Xinjiang, admitted that the authorities were doing little to attack the root of the problem by stemming the supply to the northwest in the first place.

Asked if they only acted at the tail end of the supply line, the officer said: "That is right. They are not doing as you suggested [stopping it from getting to Xinjiang]. Over here, we normally do rehabilitation. And we also punish those who are selling the drugs openly. That is the solution now."

Beijing blamed
He said those caught using drugs were sent for "re-education through labor", an administrative sentence of up to three years which can be imposed by police without need for a trial.

A member of staff at the Urumqi Voluntary Drugs Treatment Center told RFA that the center charged 2,350 yuan (U.S.$293) for a 10-day rehab program, and that those sent to the mandatory rehab center were also charged fees for treatment.

“This is a volunteer place and people come here voluntarily to quit drugs,” the official at the government-run clinic said. “On the other hand, the others are mandatory, and you still have to pay after you are released from them…In fact, the [treatment center] is a jail.”

Sources told RFA’s Uyghur service that rehab programs rarely worked because they couldn’t afford methadone, a heroin substitute commonly used in clinics elsewhere.

“We’ve got quite a lot of returning patients,” the rehab clinic official said. “It’s all up to them after they are released from here.”

Low levels of education
Many Uyghurs, who twice enjoyed short-lived independence as the state of East Turkestan during the 1930s and 40s, are bitterly opposed to Beijing’s rule in Xinjiang.

They see the growing drugs and AIDS epidemic as part of China’s colonial rule in the region.

Former drug-trafficking enforcement officer Behtiyar echoed the concerns of many Uyghurs who spoke to RFA that the Chinese authorities weren’t trying as hard as they might to address the problem.

“A nation can be destroyed in many different ways,” said Behtiyar, who is currently living in the Netherlands.

He said corrupt government officials were frequently a part of the increasingly professionalized trade in opiates from the Golden Triangle. “Drug abuse is common in other parts of China, and the government is quite successful in drug-trafficking,” he said.

Beijing links drugs, terror
He blamed low levels of education and development among Uyghurs for their vulnerability to the drugs trade.

“First of all, our people are living in backwardness. They are not getting the education they need. Furthermore, our people cannot practice their cultural and religious beliefs, and they are being forced to do certain things against their will. Therefore, they are into drugs now.”

“Secondly…our people are living in poverty and hunger. They hardly have much income to live on and they have no other ways to support themselves,” he added.

An article published online by the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute of Silk Road Studies in February said heroin retail prices were currently 4-5 times higher in Xinjiang than in the Central Asian countries it borders, and that the province “has a sizeable and growing drug addict population.”

“The primary supplier to this market has been Myanmar [Burma] via lengthy routes across China, but the logistical challenges to Central Asian suppliers are diminishing quickly,” wrote author Jacob Townsend.

Chinese authorities have linked the war on drugs to their own "war on terror" in Xinjiang, where Beijing claims that terrorist organizations operate, some with links to al-Qaeda.

Top officials first began linking the issues of terrorism and drug-trafficking at a meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) in 2004, launching a campaign more defined by ethnicity than by specific actions of clearly identified terrorist groups.

The SCO groups China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyztan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan.

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This seems like a gorwing problem in the area. I was surprised to see that it was coming form Burma. Now that Afghanistan is becoming the hotspot for the drug trade in the area, China will be even more effected! I think the Chinese goevrnment should work with the SCO and other countries in the area to try and stop the growing drug trade in the region.
 

FreeAsia2000

Junior Member
Have you seen my scenario ?

I'm wondering at what point the drugs epidemic is going to start affecting
the family's of communist party officials.

Thats when action will be taken.
 

DPRKUnderground

Junior Member
FreeAsia2000 said:
Have you seen my scenario ?

I'm wondering at what point the drugs epidemic is going to start affecting
the family's of communist party officials.

Thats when action will be taken.

The Uyghurs aren't really seeing China's economic boom, and I think that comes into the formula. China needs to put a lot of effort to modernize Xinjiang province.
 

Roger604

Senior Member
DPRKUnderground said:
“First of all, our people are living in backwardness. They are not getting the education they need. Furthermore, our people cannot practice their cultural and religious beliefs, and they are being forced to do certain things against their will. Therefore, they are into drugs now.”

This is the problem..... what do you want? religion or education? You can't have both.

The Uighurs are free to assimilate into the Han population and adopt mainstream culture/customs. But you can't live like a 5th century nomad in 21st century.
 

DPRKUnderground

Junior Member
Roger604 said:
This is the problem..... what do you want? religion or education? You can't have both.

The Uighurs are free to assimilate into the Han population and adopt mainstream culture/customs. But you can't live like a 5th century nomad in 21st century.

That's true. But what do you think they're doing in the Gulf? They have adopted more aminstream culture, but they still keep true to their religion (sort of). But don't they already have education? I know they follow Jadidism and learn normal things at the madrassas.
 
D

Deleted member 675

Guest
Roger604 said:
This is the problem..... what do you want? religion or education? You can't have both.

The Uighurs are free to assimilate into the Han population and adopt mainstream culture/customs. But you can't live like a 5th century nomad in 21st century.

Why do they have to sacrifice their religion to improve themselves? Islam/Uighur culture does not say that you must be lazy or stupid. Plus I think very few, if any, of them are nomadic. They live in communities not unlike the Han settlers. However, as with places like Tibet, the Han arrivals are the ones benefitting from China's growth. It is up to the local/central governments to resolve this, not blame the Uighurs.
 

Baibar of Jalat

Junior Member
This seems like a gorwing problem in the area. I was surprised to see that it was coming form Burma. Now that Afghanistan is becoming the hotspot for the drug trade in the area, China will be even more effected! I think the Chinese goevrnment should work with the SCO and other countries in the area to try and stop the growing drug trade in the region.

The problem is the Uighers and also Tibetans have been discriminated against mainly in Maos time, unfortunatly these groups supported the Nationalists in the Civil War. The Uighers like Tibet had a brief peroid of political atonomy, there is some controversial issues relating to miniroty plight in China . But on the other hand, minorities in modern China do get some extra benefits such as free education and are except from the one child policy.

The Uyghurs aren't really seeing China's economic boom, and I think that comes into the formula. China needs to put a lot of effort to modernize Xinjiang province

Major ponit DPRK highlighted the Boom is in costal cities where this group lives is very isolated. Think about how many Han peasants live in poverty in Big cities and in the rural areas, these Han groups have same culture but still are poor explain that.

This is the problem..... what do you want? religion or education? You can't have both.

The Uighurs are free to assimilate into the Han population and adopt mainstream culture/customs. But you can't live like a 5th century nomad in 21st century

The idea assimiliation being easy is laughable. Why is there a world famous place called China Town in San Francisco and other places outside the far east. Because Chinese immigrants congregated in one area due to they had cultural bonds and also sought protection from familiar people. Most immigrants are like that, in China over a billion are Hans where it is only tens a million Uigher, which is pretty intimdating for a miniroty. Could you garantee there be no discrimination against them because they look different?
 

DPRKUnderground

Junior Member
Also, a lot of the anti-government sentiment from the Uighurs is spreading to Pakistan. The BLA has links to Uighur guerilla groups and many attacks on Chinese engineers in Pakistan have been carried out by Uighurs. I think the Chinese government should tolerate them and what they believe in. Let them have more freedosm. I'm not trying to make this all political, but I think that would be a good strategy.
 
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