China hopes to revive the Silk Road with bullet trains to Xinjiang

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/sep/30/china-bullet-high-speed-train

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The bullet train slices past the edge of the Gobi desert, through gale-swept grasslands and past snowy peaks, a high-altitude, high-speed and hi-tech manifestation of China’s re-imagined Silk Road meant to draw the country’s restive west ever tighter into Beijing’s embrace.

With growing determination, China is spreading its wings across its own vast province of Xinjiang, and towards central Asia and its huge reserves of oil and natural gas.

The $23bn, high-speed train link, which is still being tested in winds that can sometimes reach up to 215 km/h, is just one symbol of that broader determination to cement China’s control over its Muslim-majority Xinjiang region through investment and economic growth, secure important sources of energy and escape any risk of encirclement by US allies to the east.

The train will run from Lanzhou to Xinjiang’s capital, Urumqi; for the longer-term, China is even talking about extending the high-speed network through Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Iran and Turkey to Bulgaria.

“The high-speed railway will build the foundation for the Silk Road economic belt,” Erkin Tuniyaz, vice-chairman of the regional government, told reporters after a recent media trip on the train. “Xinjiang will be the biggest beneficiary of the Silk Road. It will help it open up further, increase trade, tourism and other exchanges with neighbouring countries. It’s a historical opportunity for Xinjiang.”

Indeed, as the US enacts a strategic rebalance or “pivot” toward east Asia and withdraws troops from Afghanistan, China is responding with a “pirouette” in the opposite direction, turning its face toward central Asia and the west, says James Leibold, a regional specialist from Melbourne’s La Trobe University.

Touring Xinjiang in April, President Xi Jinping was quoted as saying that the long-term stability of Xinjiang was vital to the entire country’s “unity, harmony and national security, as well as to the great revival of the Chinese nation”. Yet Xi’s western gambit is arguably bound up in a basic contradiction.

For all is not well in Xinjiang, home to the Muslim Uighur people, where discontent with China’s iron rule runs high and a new terrorist threat has emerged, apparently inspired by a dangerous blend of separatism and radical Islam. A gruesome knife attack at a railway station in the city of Kunming in March and a bomb attack on a street market in Urumqi on 22 May left 66 people dead and brought the region’s troubles on to the world’s front pages.

While the dream of a new Silk Road speaks of open borders and the free movement of people and goods, China’s response to that discontent and violence has been a tightening of its already strangling controls over Xinjiang: mass surveillance and closed borders, ever-stricter controls on religious practice and a “strike hard” campaign against extremism that has already seen hundreds of arrests and more than 20 executions since May, all on terrorism-related charges.

Xi is gambling on his ability to manage that contradiction, but so far, the signs are not good, some observers say.

Xi has effectively doubled down on China’s long-standing policy toward Xinjiang, a strategy that has three fundamental strands: strict control meant to identify and eliminate separatists; massive economic investment meant to win over other people; and a large-scale migration of China’s majority Han people into Xinjiang – an ethnic dilution of the Uighurs’ hold on what they consider to be their homeland.

The train, which will cut travelling time from Lanzhou to Urumqi from 20 hours to eight, is both a symbol of investment and a useful tool if the government wants to encourage even more Han migration west.

In a major speech on Xinjiang in May, Xi vowed to promote ethnic unity and provide more jobs for local people. But at the same time, an intensified crackdown on conservative Islam has sparked resentment among many Muslim Uighurs.

Xinjiang’s mountains and deserts hide huge deposits of oil, natural gas, coal, gold and other minerals, but the vast province has just 22 million people. In 1949, when the Communist party swept to power in China, Han Chinese made up less than 7% of Xinjiang’s population; today, they comprise 40%. Uighurs, at 43%, are now a minority in the region, with other, mainly Muslim, ethnic groups making up the remaining 17% of the province’s population.

Many Uighurs feel like second-class citizens in Xinjiang, culturally, socially and economically discriminated against by the now dominant Han. The capital, Urumqi, is a deeply divided city where the two groups barely mix and ethnic riots in 2009 left at least 200 people dead.

Nor has money helped. The opening up of the Chinese economy in the 1990s, coupled with significant investment in industry and infrastructure in Xinjiang, brought fast economic growth and higher living standards to the region, but those gains disproportionately benefited the Han people – and so fuelled more Uighur discontent.

Freed from strict government controls, state-owned enterprises run by Han managers overwhelmingly hired Han workers, often openly discriminating against Uighurs and attracting a new wave of Han migrants from what is known as “mainland China”.

Within the region, experts say the economic divide between the Han-majority northern city of Urumqi and the mainly Uighur, more rural south is both sharp and growing.

Implicitly acknowledging the existence of that divide, officials say the government is also hoping to promote a “southern Silk Road” that would revitalise ancient trading posts such as Kashgar and Hotan. Plans to establish textiles factories hold out the promise of jobs, while the eventual extension of the high-speed train on a new route to the south is supposed to promote what the Communist party calls a more “modern” way of thinking.

“The building of the Silk Road, the south route, will help the ethnic groups become more open and modern,” said Lai Xin, a senior official at Xinjiang’s development and reform commission, a key policymaking body. “As long as modern things enter Xinjiang, it will affect people’s way of living and production, and will change their way of thinking. We have to do something. We can’t leave them alone just because their way of thinking is backwards.”

Yet, as two Uighur scholars in Urumqi studied a map showing a new line for a high-speed passenger train, and the old railway line soon to be largely devoted to freight traffic, they could not escape a wry conclusion. “The resources from Xinjiang are going one way, and people from the mainland are coming the other way,” one said to the other.

Restrictions on the ability of Uighurs even to get passports, as well as the way the Han Chinese have so far monopolised the fruits of development in Xinjiang, do not bode well.

“If done well, the Silk Road could have a huge impact on Xinjiang and bring real development momentum,” said one of those scholars, speaking on the condition of anonymity.

“But it is doubtful how much benefit the Uighur people will get,” he said. “We need good policies, otherwise it will cause the divide between ethnic groups to widen even further – and that would be a disaster.”

This article appeared in Guardian Weekly, which incorporates material from the Washington Post