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China clamps down on Mongolian protests
by Staff Writers
Beijing (UPI) May 30, 2011

China mulls compensation for Tiananmen dead: group
Beijing (AFP) May 31, 2011 - Chinese police have for the first time raised the possibility of compensation for those killed in the crushing of the 1989 Tiananmen pro-democracy protests, families of victims said Tuesday.

Police have met twice with relatives of one victim beginning in February, the Tiananmen Mothers said, in a possible sign that the Communist government is changing its view on the brutal June 4 crackdown in the heart of Beijing.

"They only raised the question of how much to pay, emphasising that this was meant for that individual case and not for the families in the group as a whole," the group said in an annual open letter to mark the June 4 anniversary.

The letter said, however, that police did not discuss a formal apology for the killings or a public account of who ordered the shootings -- two of the group's long-standing demands.

"The Tiananmen Mothers have repeatedly appealed to the government over the past 16 years for dialogue, yet government authorities have ignored us," said the letter, posted on the group's website.

"This year, the silence was finally broken."

The letter was signed by 127 members of the group, which is made up of relatives of those killed in the crackdown. It gave no further details on the compensation discussions.

Hundreds, perhaps thousands, are believed to have died when the government sent in tanks and soldiers to clear Tiananmen Square on the night of June 3-4, 1989, violently crushing six weeks of pro-democracy protests.

An official verdict after the protests called them a "counter-revolutionary rebellion".

The wording has been softened since then but the crackdown remains a taboo subject, with any mention of it censored. Those who persist in raising the issue have been jailed or otherwise harassed.

The letter acknowledged that the motives behind the government's apparent overture were unclear.

It noted that the approach came amid what the group called the harshest crackdown on dissent since 1989, carried out this year as Beijing has moved to prevent unrest similar to that which has swept the Arab world.

Contacted by AFP, the Beijing Public Security Bureau refused to comment on the letter or the reported compensation discussions.

The Tiananmen Mothers have documented the killing of 203 people during the crackdown, all of whom were peaceful demonstrators or citizens, the letter said.

The letter also urged the government to open direct talks with the Tiananmen Mothers, instead of discussing the compensation issue through police intermediaries.

It also urged an end to the police harassment and surveillance that have dogged many of the members of the Tiananmen Mothers for decades.

"Our door to dialogue with the government has remained open at all times," the letter said.

"If there are discussions, then they should be real discussions, to resolve issues point by point."

Parts of China's Inner Mongolia region remain under tight security after the government announced it will put a Chinese miner on trial for allegedly killing a Mongolian man.

Ethnic Mongolians continue to gather and protest the death of the man who died during a protest at a mine two weeks ago.

Chinese authorities have been increasing police and paramilitary forces in the region since May 10 when a 35-year-old herdsman trying to protect his land was allegedly run down and killed by an ethnically Han Chinese van driver.

Police said they also have another suspect in custody in the death of the herdsman.

The incidents have exacerbated tensions between ethnic Mongolians, who make up 20 percent of the population of 25 million. They're concerned that their culture and nomadic way of life is under threat by the growing number of Han Chinese moving into the region.

Police armed with batons are reportedly posted at the main square in Hohhot, capital of the Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region, and aren't allowing people access to the public area.

Armed police also have taken up positions in some universities and high schools to check papers and are turning some people away.

The government disrupted access to the Internet and closed Internet cafes in a move that some critics claim is similar to martial law.

"Chinese authorities have declared martial law in major cities of the Mongolian region including Hohhot, Tongliao, Ulaanhad (Chifing in Chinese) and Dongsheng in the face of mass protests by students and herders," a statement on the Web site of the Southern Mongolian Human Rights Information Center in New York, said.

"Tight security has been imposed as the authorities attempt to quash any protest and unrest," the statement said.

Access to the region is limited but a local resident told the BBC the Mongolian culture is under threat.

"In the past Mongolian herdsmen seldom held protests but now they are rising up because the damage to the grassland is so serious, plus the desertification, lack of rain that it is becoming intolerable," said the resident, who unnamed.

The BBC also reported that references to the demonstrations are being taken down from Internet sites.

Almas Sharnud, an activist in Tongliao, speaking to SMHRIC by phone, said plainclothes security men are more apparent on the streets.

"I have been put under home confinement and if I want to go out I must get approval," he said. "Two security personnel follow me publicly when I go out. Several friends told me that on the morning of May 28 hundreds of Mongols gathered near the Sharmurun Square but reportedly they were immediately dispersed by the army deployed from the Shen Yang Military District."

"There are increasing conflicts between herders and miners as the authorities open up more mines in the grasslands to meet their goal of turning Inner Mongolia into the nation's energy base."

In the past decade, Inner Mongolia has become China's leading producer of coal and rare earth elements. But this has produced disquiet among the generally peaceful population who fear their way of life -- and their traditional grassland environment -- is changing forever, SMHRIC said.




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SINO DAILY
China vows to address Mongol grievances
Beijing (AFP) May 31, 2011
China vowed Tuesday to act to address problems that have sparked protests by ethnic Mongols while also warning of unspecified "overseas" forces fanning the unrest in Inner Mongolia. The vast region has seen a wave of demonstrations over the past week, sparked by the killing of a protesting Mongol herder and fuelled by resentment over Chinese rule and rapid exploitation of the area's rich nat ... read more


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