Tensions rise between Tibetans, Chinese Muslims

Tensions rise between Tibetans, Chinese Muslims
Long-standing enmity is a factor in recent clashes in Lhasa and other areas.
By Barbara Demick
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

June 23, 2008

GUOJIA, CHINA — The riot began with a customer’s complaint about her dinner.

“Waitress, there’s a tooth in my soup,” a Tibetan woman said indignantly.

Before long, a curious crowd of Tibetans gathered around the soup bowl. Restaurant owner Yun Sha came out of the kitchen and insisted that the offending item was just a chip off a lamb bone. “Let’s trash this restaurant,” Yun heard somebody scream, and the crowd proceeded to do just that.

Tables, chairs, a television flew through the air. Kitchen equipment was smashed with bricks. Soon the crowd had moved on to other Muslim restaurants on the same strip as terrified waiters and cooks scurried outside for safety.

Disputes such as that one last summer are common in western China, where a volatile ethnic stew is increasingly erupting into violence. Among China’s dozens of minorities, few get along as badly as Tibetans and Muslims. Animosities have played a major — and largely unreported — role in the clashes that have taken place since mid-March. During the March 14 riots in the Tibetan region’s capital, Lhasa, many of the shops and restaurants attacked were Muslim-owned. A mob tried to storm the city’s main mosque and succeeded in setting fire to the front gate. Shops and restaurants in the Muslim quarter were destroyed.

Over the last five years, there have been dozens of clashes between Tibetans and Muslims in Sichuan, Gansu and Qinghai provinces, as well as in the Tibet Autonomous Region. Most of the incidents go unreported. The state-controlled news media are not eager to publicize anything that belies Communist Party claims that minorities live together in a “harmonious society.”

Andrew M. Fischer, a London-based Tibet scholar who is one of the few who has written on the subject, said the Tibetan exile community also was reluctant to publicize incidents that might harm the international image of Tibetans.

“It is the dark side of Tibetan nationalism,” Fischer said. “It is almost as though the Tibetans are diverting their anger over their own situation towards another vulnerable minority.”

Most of the incidents involve the Hui, who ethnically are Han Chinese but practice Islam. China’s 9.8 million Hui and 5.4 million Tibetans historically have lived in proximity, at various times fighting, competing or intermarrying and collaborating.

As Buddhists, the Tibetans don’t like to kill animals, but they do eat meat and wear furs, so they leave it to Muslim butchers and tanners to do the slaughtering. The Muslims also own many restaurants, and they don’t shy away from remote Tibetan areas where other Han Chinese are loath to tread. They often buy products from Tibetan nomads, who have difficulty selling because of their illiteracy.

“To be honest, the Tibetans don’t have the business savvy of the Hui. The Tibetans have to sell their products to Hui. The Hui have to buy from the Tibetans,” said Genga Jatsi, a Tibetan doctor from Qinghai. “I suppose because we are interdependent we resent each other.”

The tensions are palpable in Golog, a mountainous prefecture in Qinghai. Along a four-lane boulevard called Tuanjie, or “Solidarity,” Street, a large archway separates the Tibetan town of Dawu from the smaller Muslim town of Guojia.

Muslim taxi drivers are nervous about crossing into the Tibetan side at night. And since last summer’s restaurant incident, Tibetans have refused to go to the strip of Muslim eateries specializing in lamb and noodles.

“We’re afraid that there will be more trouble,” said Yun, who sold his restaurant after the incident but still lives in Golog, doing construction work. He sat in an otherwise empty restaurant around the corner from his old place, he and the restaurant owner, Ma Zhongyang, slumped over the linoleum tables, watching a small television in the corner.

The men said about 800 of Guojia’s 3,000 Muslims had left in recent months, frightened by what had happened in Lhasa. During the mid-March riots, Muslim shopkeepers and their families were badly hurt and some were killed when fires set in their shops spread to upstairs apartments.

“We saw what happened on television. After that, I sent away my children from here. I fear for their safety,” Ma said.

Many Muslims have stopped wearing the traditional white caps that identify their religion. Many women now wear a hairnet instead of a scarf. Since the nearest mosque was burned down in August, the Muslims pray at home — “in secret,” Ma said.

Twenty Tibetans, many of them monks, were arrested in the incident and a senior monk, accused of being the ringleader, was sentenced to death, Fischer said.

The animosity dates to at least the 1930s, when Muslim warlord Ma Bufeng tried to establish an Islamic enclave in Qinghai. Tibetans were pushed off their lands, some executed or forced to convert. After the communists took over in 1949, tensions were repressed.

Tsering Shayka, a Tibetan historian, said ethnic conflicts had resurfaced in recent years with the gradual liberalization of China, in particular the relaxation of travel restrictions.

“What is happening now is that you have all this transient population. People are migrating here and there and coming into more and more day-to-day contact. In the past, they weren’t allowed to trespass into each other’s territory and you had no ethnic conflict,” Shayka said.

Tibetans complain frequently about their culture being diluted when non-Tibetans, in particular Muslims, move into their areas and buy Tibetan businesses. That has been especially true in Lhasa, where Muslims now own many of the souvenir shops.

In the mid-1990s, Tibetans started boycotting Muslim restaurants in Lhasa after it was claimed that somebody had found a finger in a bowl of soup, setting off a rumor that Muslims were cannibals. Another rumor had it that Muslim cooks were urinating on food or adding their bathwater to soup, which, it was said, would function as a charm to make Tibetans convert to Islam.

“You hear all these stories about Muslims putting stuff in the soup. But I think it is all about business competition and economics,” said Tsering, 37, a Tibetan businessman from Lhasa who did not want his last name to be published.

Making matters worse, the Hui usually support the Chinese government in its repression of Tibetan separatism.

“They think the Dalai Lama is their leader. But how is independence possible?” whispers Han Rugubai, a 26-year-old Muslim who sells clothing at Dawu’s main market. “With the country developing so fast, life is good. People have enough to eat. They have clothes.”

Han said she believed that the Tibetans’ real quarrel was with the Han Chinese who dominate this country’s population and politics.

“They use us as a scapegoat for their grievances against the country,” she said.

In the last few years, clashes have broken out over the most trivial grievances. In February, a Tibetan child’s complaint about what a Hui merchant was charging for balloons triggered a brawl that involved thousands of people.

Chinese troops intervened in a 2003 dispute that started over a game of billiards. A Tibetan and a Muslim died in tit-for-tat killings, the Muslim stabbed to death with a barbecue skewer.

barbara.demick@latimes.com

Jia Han of The Times’ Beijing Bureau contributed to this report.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-muslims23-2008jun23,0,6188244,full.story

Free Tibet.  One has to wonder if the riots earlier this year were really about fighting the CCP’s rule or just an economically and racially motivated attack against non-Buddhist, non-Tibetan people in “Tibet”.

These weeks

These past weeks have been interesting.  I am no longer living the single life, I received a promotion, and I am now apartment hunting for a nice place in Alderney City and around Dukes.  So far, I am still being processed before I can start working in the East Island City office so I am now working in Algonquin in the interim, which is fine.

Craigslist.org is a helpful tool.

Yesterday, I went to one of my old classmate’s housewarming party and it was good to see them and the gang after 2 years from graduating from the business school.

In terms of online drama, I think that most of that nonsense is naturally working itself out and the actions of one person can have a great deal of repercussions to his peers and to himself.

Battlestar Galactica, Season 4, Episode 10

The Final Four Cylons are outed and they find Earth. It turns out the show does indeed take place in the distant future with the humans being descendants of humans who went off-world after Earth was destroyed in a nuclear war.

Near the end of the episode, the area the landing party arrives at appears to be the Brooklyn side of New York City. The landing party is next to a broad river and across that river to the left is a wide bay. The other shore appears to be the edge of Lower Manhattan with a destroyed skyline of buildings.

The camera pans to the right over what is ostensibly the East River until the last two seconds of the episode, where at the far right edge of the screen stands a wrecked structure with a heavily abbreviated roadway. It appears to be the East Tower (Brooklyn side) of the Brooklyn Bridge. However, it should be noted that the information on this is incomplete.

So it looks like our heroes with the Cylons landed on an area that looked like an atomised Manhattan…

I am promoted.

I am now in the process of transitioning to my new position working at the LC24 Tower at East Island City in Dukes, Liberty City.

This is a change from my previous job working in an office building nearby the Triangle Building in Algonquin

Liberty City has been good to me…

Now I need to find an apartment nearby Alderney City.

Seven dead in Tokyo knife attack

Seven dead in Tokyo knife attack

A man armed with a knife has killed seven people and injured 10 others in central Tokyo, Japanese media say.

The incident occurred in the Akihabara district, a busy shopping area known as Electric Town that is popular with young people and tourists.

A suspect, said to be 25-year-old Tomohiro Kato, has been arrested.

Police spokesman Jiro Akaogi told reporters: “The suspect said he came to Akihabara to kill people. He said he was tired of life”.

The dead include six men, ranging in age from 19 to 74, and a 21-year-old woman, Kyodo News said.

Reports say the suspect drove a rented truck into a crowd in the early afternoon and then began stabbing people at random.

The moments after the stabbings in Tokyo

James Slaymaker, a British man working in Japan, got to the area shortly after the stabbings. He described the scene to BBC News:

“As I walked down the street, I noticed there were a lot of police cars. I noticed there was a guy literally just lying there with tape on his eyes and blood pouring out of the side of him. I was appalled.

When I walked round the corner I saw a woman lying on the floor
Kamran Zaffar, eyewitness

“I could see carnage – bodies everywhere. Some were conscious, some were not, lying by the side of the road and on the road. There were people everywhere, a lot of onlookers.”

Another eyewitness told Kyodo News: ”The man jumped on top of a man he had hit with his vehicle and stabbed him with a knife many times. Walking toward Akihabara station, he slashed nearby people at random.”

Crime increase

The Akihabara district specialises in electronic gadgets and video games and is especially popular with people interested in comic books and distinctive fashion.

It is also home to one of the first shops to sell personal robots and robotics. The area is often crowded on weekends.

Once rare in Japan, there has been an increase in knife crime in recent years.

In January, a 16-year-old school boy armed with two kitchen knives injured several people on a crowded shopping street in Tokyo’s Shinagawa Ward.

The Akihabara attack occurred on the same date that a man with a history of mental illness went through a primary school in 2001, stabbing children at random.

Eight children died and 15 pupils and teachers were injured in that attack, in a school in Ikeda, in the city of Osaka.

Early reports suggested Mr Kato could have been a gangster, though these were later played down.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/asia-pacific/7442327.stm

Some people are just crazy enough to play “Grand Theft Auto” in real life.  I remembered playing “San Andreas” in college where I randomly drove a car into a crowd people and kept whacking them with a baseball bat…I am more disturbed by the fact this guy was around my age range…

It seems like there are underlying tensions in Japanese society at this time.  The government of Japan really needs to fix their economy or else moral decay and crime will worsen in Japan.

LC24 Tower vs Citigroup Building

This is going to be interesting…

Phase 2

It looks like there will be some new changes in store for me…I hope it’s for the best.

Obama ‘winner’ of Democratic race

Obama ‘winner’ of Democratic race

US Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama has earned enough delegates to clinch his party’s nomination, US media have projected.

The projections are based on his performance on the final day of the primaries in South Dakota and Montana.

His rival Hillary Clinton, who is projected by US media to win the contest in South Dakota, has refused to concede the election.

But she has told backers she is “open” to being Mr Obama’s running mate.

In a speech to supporters in New York, Mrs Clinton congratulated Mr Obama and his supporters “for all that they have accomplished”.

But she stressed that she was making “no decisions tonight” about her continued presence in the race.

Winning post

Mr Obama was only a few delegates short of the 2,118 needed ahead of the polls closing in South Dakota and Montana.

And although he failed to win in South Dakota, he had managed to pick up enough endorsements during the day from the remaining uncommitted “super-delegates” – party officials with a free choice over who to support – to pass the winning post as soon as polls closed in the state.

Polls are scheduled to close at 2000 (0200 GMT) in Montana.

Before the voting was complete, Republican presumptive nominee John McCain delivered a speech to supporters in Louisiana, in which he declared that “the primary season is over, and the general election campaign has begun”.

In his speech, he attacked Mr Obama for being “the wrong change”, and defended himself against the Obama campaign’s criticism that he will continue President Bush’s policies, saying he had “not seen eye to eye” with the president on many issues.

Earlier, AP reported that two senior campaign officials were saying the race was effectively over.

The officials suggested that in a speech in New York City Mrs Clinton would not formally end her campaign but would accept Mr Obama had enough delegates to win, the agency said.

Not formally conceding would give Mrs Clinton more leverage on her future role in the Democratic Party’s battle against Senator John McCain in the November election, analysts said.

But, speaking on CNN, Clinton campaign chief Terry McAuliffe said the reports were “100%” incorrect.

“The race goes on. We’ve got two important votes today and then tomorrow we’ve got to work the super-delegates and we believe we can persuade enough super-delegates to come over and support Senator Clinton.”

Mr Obama is due to speak in St Paul, Minnesota, where the Republicans will hold their convention in September and formally nominate Mr McCain as their candidate.

Mr Obama appears well aware he must heal divisions within the Democratic Party.

“The sooner we can bring the party together, the better, so we can focus on John McCain and taking back the White House,” he said on Monday.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7434791.stm

Thank God the nightmare is nearing an end.  Hillary Clinton did nothing but waste Obama’s valuable campaign time against the Bush-wannabe known as John McCain.  Clinton did nothing but whine, play the race card, and professed victory using obscure technicalities.

I am so glad enough sane Americans decided that political dynasties are a bad idea starting with Hillary.

Earthquake Relief Party at Club Element

StageNightLife Presents

Earthquake Relief Party at Club Element

Party all night without the guilt

Join us at Club Element for a charity benefit to help provide aid to the thousands affected by the Sichuan, China earthquake.

guestlist pricing
*ladies free until 11pm
*everybody $15 until 12am
*discounts for Birthday Parties and Bottle Reservations with Vip line treatment and Complimentary Admissions

All door proceeds will be donated to the American Red Cross

Element
255 E. Houston Street
(corner of Ave A and Essex Street)
New York, NY
10pm-4am

*21+ over
*Dress to impress
*Come as early as you can for guest list pricing

Come join and mingle with everyone else from the group. Send additional names to guestlist@stagenightlife.com

Japan Day in New York City

Japan Day was held today at Central Park near the entrance at 98th Street and 5th Avenue.  This year’s events consisted of some traditional concerts and pop culture concerts, a robot exhibit, some free food and free canned tea.

I met up with the rest of my friends around the afternoon no thanks to delays in PATH but we all got there in time.  After we all got together, we went to find a picnic area around the Japan Day section of the park and went about having our picnic.  Some of the friends prepared rice balls, some fruit salad, and some crackers.  The food was good and it was a nice sunny day to relax after a hectic week at work.

The free tea they were giving away was great.  The flavours they offered were white tea, green tea, and darjeeling tea.  I preferred the darjeeling and the green teas over the white flavoured ones.  Instead of watching the various performances and concerts we spent most of our time just chilling in the picnic area and enjoying the scenery.  Later, two of my friends joined us before we went around the exhibits.

The performances were very lively and the crowd was excited by them.  However, there were a few Japanophiles who were just acting like rude punks while some people were performing.  Most of them were wearing Naruto, or some weird Japanese costume and jumping around like idiots while some random people watch in amusement or took pictures of it.  Other than that it was fun.

Most of the exhibits were closing shop around 3:00 PM while the final acts were performing on stage.  The funny thing was two other friends showed up just as things were wrapping up.  They had made the fatal error of trying to drive to New York from Bergen county when today was also the day for the Israel’s 60th Anniversary festivities, Japan Day, some NYPD event, and random tourists coming to Manhattan on the weekend.  As a a result it took them about 3 hours to get here and all they could do was just enjoy the leftover picnic food.

After the Japan Day festival ended, we headed out to the East Village for some fast Japanese food, some gourmet pudding desert, and some shopping at the Sunrise mart before calling it a night.    The weather actually got hotter as the night went on instead of cooling down.  Today was a fun day, and it looks like this is the start of the summer season.

On a sad note, I really am disappointed with Puerto Rico for voting for Hillary.  Do these people really want McCain to win in 2008 or are they just brainwashed like the rest of the Hillary supporters?

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7429996.stm

Hillary Clinton has said her fight for the Democratic presidential nomination will go on after winning a largely symbolic victory in Puerto Rico.

With only two state contests left to fight, she is trailing Barack Obama by 1,915 delegate votes to 2,070, according to AP’s rolling count.