While no terror outfit has claimed responsibility for the attack, observers in Beijing have blamed the Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP).
Entrenched in secret mountain bases in Pakistan, the Turkistan
Islamic Party has organised attacks on Chinese citizens and diplomats throughout the world.
As
experience has shown, China takes a passive position in the struggle against
global Islamic jihad.
A suicide
bomb attack on the Chinese embassy in the Kyrgyz capital last week reviled once again the irrefutable connection between China’s
Uyghur militants and the global jihad networks including al-Qaeda and the
Islamic State.
While no terror outfit has claimed responsibility for the attack,
observers in Beijing have blamed the Turkistan Islamic Party
(TIP) - a Uyghur separatist organisation headquartered in Pakistan’s North
Waziristan area. “This is the first
car bombing aimed specifically against overseas Chinese diplomatic outposts,
and the Turkistan Islamic Party, a branch of the East Turkistan Islamic
Movement, is highly suspected of carrying out the attack,” Li Wei of
the Chinese Institutes of Contemporary International Relations, was quoted by Global Times as saying.
Entrenched in secret mountain bases in Pakistan, the members of the Turkistan
Islamic Party have organised attacks on Chinese citizens and diplomats in
various parts of the world. In a similar
incident back in 2002, a Chinese diplomat, Wang Jianping, was shot dead in a
car by Uyghur separatists.
Xinjiang - the homeland of China’s 10 million Uighurs, just over the border
from Kyrgyzstan - is hit by deadly violence. The separatist sentiments in
Xinjiang can be traced back to the ethnic clash between the majority Han
Chinese and the Uighur Muslim minority- calling for the creation of an
independent ‘East Turkestan’ based on their distinct tradition, religion,
culture and language.
Researchers usually argue that separatist sentiments among the Uyghur are a
result of the Chinese government’s coercive policies of restricting the
expression of cultural and religious identity, but the same is not true. This
can be explained in terms of the ongoing and serious Islamisation of the
region.
TIP leader Abdullah Mansour, from his hideout in Pakistan in March 2014, vowed a holy war against the Chinese, whom he
described as an enemy of all Muslims.”The
fight against China is our Islamic responsibility and we have to fulfil it,”
he said from an undisclosed location.
According to The Jerusalem Post,
Jacques Neriah of the Jerusalem Centre for Public Affairs- former Foreign
Policy advisor to the Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin- informed a Chinese
delegation of the presence of Uyghur militant training camps in Pakistan and
presented material that suggests the number of militants in the camps to be
over 1000.
TIP’s apparent link with Pakistani Taliban,
al-Qaeda and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, their association with the
Islamic State in 2013, training camps in Pakistan’s Waziristan and the recent surge
in Internet-based propaganda activity- all act as determinants in understanding
the cause of the separatist movement.
A report
published in the Global Times, the hawkish mouthpiece of China’s ruling
establishment, simply notes that as “China has become a major power” it is
increasingly likely that “China will get dragged into international disputes”
and become a target for terror outfits. While the report claims that
“terrorism, extremism and separatism” are present in Central Asia, the report
completely ignores the link these extremists share with Uyghur Muslim of Xingiang and the Chinese
government’s egregious policy of differentiating between good and bad
terrorists.
As experience has shown, China takes a passive position in the struggle against
global Islamic jihad. Acting with a similar policy, China blocked India’s
efforts to ban JeM chief Masood Azhar, apparently at the behest of Islamabad.
Now that Islamists are going after the Chinese more
openly than before, what will Beijing do?