Free Inner Mongolia ! | |
See the CACCP pages on Tibet and Eastern Turkestan |
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What do the Southern Mongolians say ?
Some Links About Florida Splendid China The Communist Chinese propaganda theme park in Kissimmee, Florida |
Complete list of statements concerning Florida Splendid China | |
The Eight White Ordon, Offering Ceremonies of Genghis Khan and the Mausoleum of Genghis Khan This well-researched article provides all the answers to questions about the exhibit named "Mausoleum of Genghis Khan" |
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Exhibit # 25, Mongolian Yurt of the Florida Splendid China theme park. | ||
Exhibit # 26, Mausoleum of Genghis Khan of the Florida Splendid China theme park |
Inner Mongolian People's Party
Mailing address:
Inner Mongolian People's Party
66 Witherspoon St, Suite 146
Princeton, NJ 08542
USA
Contact e-mail address: impp@innermongolia.org
Southern Mongolia
BEI - Suite #476
Princeton Meadows Center
660 Plainsboro Princeton Road
Plainsboro, NJ 08536-3096
Telephone (609) 897 - 0988.
Inner Mongolian League for the Defense of Human Rights
The Inner Mongolian League for the Defense of Human Rights was founded by Mongolian scholars and students in 1981 to protest the Chinese Communists' Document # 28, which proposed to send millions of Chinese immigrants into Inner Mongolia, so Inner Mongolia would eventually lose its Mongolian identity.
The goals of the League are :
1. to condemn and focus international attention on the mistreatment of the Mongolians by the Chinese Communists over the past 50 years,
2. to protect human rights in Inner Mongolia,
3. to struggle for true autonomy in social, political and economic spheres,
4. finally, to establish a free and independent Inner Mongolia.
For more than a decade, the members and the supporters of the League have fought against the cruel and ruthless treatment by the Chinese Communists. Some of our members have been in and out of jail, some are still in prison, and others are forced to live in hardship in places far from their families and home towns. Despite personal danger and hardships, they continue to struggle for human rights in Inner Mongolia.
Presently the League, headquartered in Germany, has founded chapters in France , the UK., Mongolia and the U.S.A. The League publishes several periodicals, "Southern Mongolia" and "Khara-Erge" to make known their views on human rights issues in Inner Mongolia.
The "Southern Mongolian Freedom Federation", the U.S chapter of the League, holds the same beliefs as the League and seeks to cooperate with other groups and organizations that support human rights and justice. The Federation will soon publish the "Voice of Southern Mongolia" to introduce the history, culture, geography and present situation of Inner Mongolia in English, Mongolian and Chinese. The Federation's main aim is to carry on the fight for human rights and freedom for Inner Mongolia, and to draw attention to this cause by informing the American public about our views. We greatly appreciate your support as we begin this important phase of our struggle.
For further information, please contact :
Southern Mongolia Freedom Federation
BEI - Suite #476
Princeton Meadows Center
660 Plainsboro Princeton Road
Plainsboro, NJ 08536-3096
Telephone (609) 897 - 0988.
Ethnic Separatism in China:
Threat or Smoke?
By DRU C. GLADNEY
A recent surge in Chinese media reports of separatist violence raises a question: Who is stirring the pot? The Chinese government certainly seems to be turning these isolated incidents into a national issue. After years of denying the existence of separatists and stressing China's "national unity," official reports have recently detailed terrorist activities in the three border regions of Xinjiang, Tibet and Inner Mongolia.
For example, in the northwestern Uighur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang, the Xinjiang Daily reported five serious incidents since February, along with a crackdown that rounded up 2,773 terrorist suspects, 6,000 pounds of explosives, and 31,000 rounds of ammunition. In Tibet, the official newspaper admitted that a bomb that exploded on March 22 outside of the Tibetan Autonomous Region government compound was the sixth attack on Chinese and regional Tibetan administrative facilities in the last nine months.
Even Inner Mongolia, whose population is only 14% Mongol, has apparently experienced a restive spring that brought separatist threats. Liu Mingzu, Communist Party secretary of Inner Mongolia, in a speech reported in the Inner Mongolia Daily, warned against "ethnic splittists" and urged people to "resolutely attack hostile separatist forces with Western backing that are trying to destroy the unity of the motherland."
The truth is belied by such alarmist talk. China's separatists are small in number, poorly equipped, loosely linked and vastly out-gunned by the People's Liberation Army and People's Armed Police. Local support for separatist activities, particularly in Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia, is ambivalent and ambiguous at best given the economic disparity between these regions and their foreign neighbors, which are generally much poorer, or even, in the case of Tajikistan, driven by a three-way civil war. Memories in the region are strong of mass starvation and widespread destruction during the Sino-Japanese and civil wars in the first half of this century, not to mention the chaotic horrors of the Cultural Revolution.
Many local activists are not calling for real independence. More often they are expressing concerns over environmental degradation, anti-nuclear testing, religious freedom, over-taxation and recently imposed limits on child- bearing. Many ethnic leaders are simply calling for more of the autonomy promised by Chinese law for the five autonomous regions, which are each led by Han Chinese First Party Secretaries controlled by Beijing.
And the external forces that the Chinese authorities often blame for separatist activities are nothing new. The Istanbul-based groups working for an independent Xinjiang have existed since the 1950s, and the Dalai Lama has been active since his exile in 1959. Separatist actions have taken place on a small-scale, but regular basis since the expansion of market and trade policies in China. With the opening of six overland gateways to Xinjiang in addition to the trans-Eurasian railway since 1991, there seems to be no chance of closing up shop. In his 1994 visit to the newly independent nations of Central Asia, Premier Li Peng even called for the opening of a "new Silk Road."
Given that separatist activity has persisted at a low level for years, what is the Chinese government's motivation for changing tack and publicizing the "internal affairs" in which foreign governments are so often accused of interfering? The answer can be found in China's domestic politics. In an interview last November, Liu Binyan, the former Xinhua journalist and now dissident Chinese writer living in exile in the U.S., suggested: "Nationalism and Han chauvinism are now the only effective instruments in the ideological arsenal of the CCP. Any disruption in the relationship with foreign countries or among ethnic minorities can be used to stir 'patriotic' sentiments of the people to support the communist authorities."
Beijing's official publicization of the separatist issue thus is a useful tool with which to promote Han unity. Recent moves suggest efforts to promote Chinese nationalism as a "unifying ideology" that will prove more attractive than communism and more manageable than capitalism. By highlighting separatist threats and external intervention, China can divert attention away from Han China's own sources of instability: rising inflation, increased income disparity, displaced "floating populations," Hong Kong's re-unification and the post-Deng succession. Perhaps nationalism will be the only "unifying ideology" left to a Chinese nation that has begun to distance itself from communism, as it has from Confucianism, Buddhism and Daoism. As Bruce Kapferer has noted, nationalism "makes the political religious."
Any event, domestic or international, can be used as an excuse to stir nationalist sentiments and the building of a new unifying ideology. As the Foreign Ministry spokesman Shen Guofang revealed in his statement concerning the most recent Sino-U.S. trade dispute: "If the U.S. goes so far as to implement its trade retaliation, China will, according to its foreign trade law, take counter measures to safeguard its sovereignty and national esteem." Trade and separatism become obstacles not to economic and political development, but to preserving national esteem. This attitude recalls the ominous words contained in the Chinese national anthem: "The Chinese race is at a most crucial moment, and we should stand up and build up a new Great Wall with our blood and flesh."
The most unsettling question is what will happen to those Chinese citizens living in the country's border regions should a nationalist movement rise up that sees them not as part of a China that is multinational and multiethnic, but as a threat. If nationalist sentiments prevail during this time of transition, what will happen to those who live within the Chinese state, but beyond the Great Wall?