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by Staff Writers Hotan, China (AFP) Nov 21, 2013 A Han Chinese emigrant to Hotan, the distant home town of "terrorists" behind a deadly attack in Beijing's Tiananmen Square, eases his fears of his Muslim Uighur neighbours quite simply -- he bans them from his restaurant. "We're afraid if Uighurs come in they will hurt the other customers," said the man, who only gave his surname as Hou. "Every week somebody gets killed," he added, sitting by the cash register and ticking off victims, most recently a young woman knifed to death. Fear and distrust fester in Hotan, a dusty tree-lined city in China's far western Xinjiang region, home to the mainly Muslim Uighur ethnic group and where racial friction has sharpened after decades of inward Han migration and economic expansion, with sporadic Uighur violence prompting heavy-handed responses by the Han-led government. Many Xinjiang residents said the vicious cycle worsened after Uighur-Han clashes in 2009 in the regional capital Urumqi left around 200 people dead. In last month's attack in Beijing -- the first blamed on Uighurs outside Xinjiang -- three family members crashed a car and set it alight, killing themselves and two tourists in Tiananmen Square, the symbolic heart of the Chinese state. All eight people behind the "terrorist attack" came from Hotan, state media said, citing police. The city's two million strong population is 96 percent Uighur. Hou, who moved from the southwestern province of Sichuan over a decade ago, accused Uighurs of "ethnic separatism" and rejected claims of discrimination as an effort to shift blame. China has sought for centuries to control Xinjiang, which means "new frontier" in contrast to the "neidi" heartland of the centre and east coast. When the Communist Party took power in 1949 it sought to secure and develop the resource-rich area by launching a military-led programme of settlement by the Han, who make up more than 90 percent of China's people. Xinjiang's Han population grew from six percent in 1949 to 38 percent in 2011, not counting part-time residents. Economic growth galloped ahead, and in the first nine months of this year stood at 10.8 percent, the ninth highest rate in the country. But Uighurs complain the boom benefits Han while they face discrimination or disadvantages such as limited Mandarin or poor connections to the neidi-based state-owned giants that drive jobs and investment. "Part of it is about discrimination, part of it is about recruitment, part of it is about finances," said Gardner Bovingdon, a Xinjiang expert at Indiana University Bloomington. Economic incentives to open businesses and do other work "have been specifically used to draw migration", he said. "They just look down on us" Hotan's central plaza, Unity Square, commemorates Beijing's dominance with a statue of a poor Uighur called Uncle Kurban expressing gratitude in the 1950s to then-leader Mao Zedong. A few Han strolling by warned against going to Uighur areas outside the city centre, while others around town said they stayed home at night and rarely interacted with Uighurs. Asked if he felt safe, a 46-year-old man surnamed Jia who came a few months earlier for work, responded: "At the end of the day this is an ethnic minority place." Uighurs also felt wary of Han, with a hospital worker saying Han storekeepers ignored him and a businessman claiming they stereotyped Uighurs as murderers. "We are fine with them, but they are not very nice to us," the hospital worker said. "It seems like they just look down on us, not that they are afraid." Police vehicles roamed the city streets and armed guards wearing camouflage stood watch at Unity Square, road intersections, a bank and a school. Several Uighurs complained about police abuse while Han felt the patrols made them safer. "The police have to be tough. But when they beat people and raid their homes for no reason, this makes us angry," said a Uighur woman. "They punish those who don't deserve it and don't punish those who do." In parts the two ethnic groups did mingle, with a Uighur cook serving steaming lamb skewers to Han families at a street stand at dusk. Some said newly arrived Han were more distrustful. "The Han who came recently don't like Uighurs and Uighurs don't like them," said a Uighur driver working for a Han neighbour he has known since childhood. "But those who came a long time ago -- up to the 1980s and 90s -- they think Uighurs are great." At a Uighur bazaar outside town, shoppers streamed past donkey-drawn carts and stalls piled with fabric, boots and watermelon, while sheep traders chatted wedged between their flocks. The few Han browsing were old-timers in the region. "Things happen everywhere, even in the neidi," said a middle-aged woman born in the city. "Han people, wherever we live we adapt."
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