From the Los Angeles Times
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.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times