CN China’s insatiable appetite for control is forcing even its “model minority” to rebel

Notice that all these suppression directives come from Beijing specifically, which I would presume is like Los Angeles, San Fransisco, Portland, New York, or Detroit if they controlled the entire US.


Unlike the Tibetans or Muslim Uyghurs of its far west, China’s ethnic Mongol population has long been seen as pacified, content, and well-assimilated, fulfilling the stereotype of a “model minority” in a country bubbling with ethnic tensions.

In recent days, however, Mongols in China, most of whom reside in the vast Inner Mongolia autonomous region south of Mongolia proper, have vigorously protested an attempt by the government to curtail the teaching of Mongolian in schools, including shifting to using national Chinese-language textbooks instead of locally developed Mongolian versions. In short, Chinese will replace Mongolian as the main medium of teaching for classes such as math and science, while Mongolian lessons will continue. Authorities are cracking down, including posting photos online of people who attended the protests and offering cash rewards for tips.

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The policy fits a broader pattern of Beijing’s quest to assert greater ideological control across all swathes of society, and increasingly oppressive policies against minorities. The starkest example of that is the human rights abuses taking place against Uyghurs and other Muslim groups in Xinjiang, where some argue a full-blown genocide is underway. Days ago, China signaled an escalation of its repressive policies in Tibet, announcing plans to strengthen education to fight “splittism.”

In contrast, Inner Mongolia, where almost twice as many ethnic Mongols reside than in Mongolia, is seen as a much less restive place. The Economist reported in 2017 that Mongols in China have to some extent been mollified by the economic opportunities accorded to them, in an area rich in natural resources. They’re also much more integrated with the Han Chinese population than Tibetans or Uyghurs. Intermarriage is common, for example, while a majority of Mongols opt to send their children to Chinese-language schools over Mongolian ones in recognition of the economic opportunities that would reap, explained Christopher Atwood, a Mongolia expert at the University of Pennsylvania. Atwood estimates that about 60% of Mongols in Inner Mongolia now speak Mongolian as their main language.

As Gegentuul Baioud, an Australia-based scholar of Mongol origin, wrote: “Indeed, up until now, many Mongolian speakers have identified as Chinese people, and there is no need to suppress a non-existent ethnic separatism by abolishing bilingual schooling.”

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By moving to target language, the state has hit a nerve. In a region where great powers have long jockeyed for influence over Mongols, the preservation of their language has been central to that resistance. Eradyn E. Bulag, an academic at the University of Cambridge, explained in a 2003 paper (paywall) that, after decades of withstanding the subjugation of the Mongolian language by the dominant Han Chinese population and the Communist Party, Mongols in China live under a constant state of “linguistic anxiety” stemming from the gradual loss of their language even as they reside in a region that is titularly Mongolian.

“We have been the weakest and oppressed in our own homeland,” said an ethnic Mongol person reached by Quartz. “Imagine you are not allowed to learn, sign public documents in your own language, let alone promote it.”

Even across the border, Mongolian continues to undergo a process of effective decolonization three decades after the fall of the Soviet Union and the end of communism in Mongolia. Earlier this year, the government said the country would move toward full adoption of the traditional alphabet (which is used in Inner Mongolia) by 2025, away from the Cyrillic alphabet, in line with other de-Russification processes in other former communist states.

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Inner Mongolia’s language protests could revive older tensions. In 2011, protests broke out in Hohhot, the region’s capital, after two ethnic Mongols opposing mining were killed by Han Chinese men.

According to Baioud, the Chinese government’s “rash” moves in Inner Mongolia are hard to understand. “What are the consequences of bringing such tribulations onto the very groups that China has held up as ‘model minorities’?” she asked.

The same could be asked, perhaps, of the Chinese governments recent crackdown in Hong Kong and the intensification of its repression campaign in Xinjiang, even as international outcry grows. Seen in that light, the Mongolian language policy change fits in the larger pattern of the state asserting its power at all costs, particularly at a time when nationalist sentiments are on the upturn.

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Previously, China had kept its coercive power in check not just in Inner Mongolia, but also over Mongolia, as it wanted to prevent fomenting any sort of pan-Mongol sentiment that could destabilize its rule, wrote Julian Dierkes, an associate professor at the University of British Columbia in Canada. Now, Dierkes notes, people in Mongolia are paying unprecedented levels of attention to the rumblings just over the border by signaling their support on social media—adding yet another problem to China’s periphery, which, from Taiwan to India, is already dangerously lined with tinderboxes.

—Jane Li contributed reporting
 
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I don't care if it's the Three Gorges Dam collapsing, or if it's the enraged Mongol hordes, I just want to see the Chinese Communist Party washed the fuck away so China can (hopefully) have freedom for it's people and their leaders will fucking stop oppressing everyone they can, especially the minorities like the Mongolians, Uhigrs, Tibetans, practitioners of Falun Gong. Oh, and put an end to the literal slavery and organ harvesting going on. The CCP is literally evil and needs to be scrubbed from the face of the Earth.
 
I think is the best place for it. You know you've gone too far as a Commie dictator when The Fucking Guardian of all places publishes an opinion piece critical of you.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...y-to-purge-and-subjugate-that-is-his-weakness
https://archive.md/PSHLP

It’s often said that power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely – but does it also induce leaders to act in foolhardy, headstrong and ultimately self-destructive ways? History, especially Chinese history, is full of examples of omnipotent rulers whose unchecked behaviour led to disaster. Xi Jinping, China’s comrade-emperor, is a modern-day case in point. Xi seems to think he can do no wrong. As a result, not much is going right.


Xi’s authoritarian, expansionist policies, pursued with increasing vehemence since he became communist party chief and president in 2012-13, have enveloped China in a ring of fire. Its borderlands are ablaze with conflict and confrontation from Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang, Tibet and the Himalayas in the north and west to Hong Kong, the South China Sea and Taiwan to the east. More than at any time since Mao’s 1949 revolution, China is also at odds with the wider world.


It’s not all bad news. China’s manufacturing heartlands are recovering quickly from the pandemic. The IMF predicts 1.2% growth this year and above 5% annually thereafter, well ahead of other major economies. Yet there is evidence that a widening wealth gap is weakening social cohesion. The rich-poor divide is symbolised by Xi, whose unaccountably large personal fortune is put at $1.5bn. Meanwhile, the pandemic, which originated in Wuhan, has seriously damaged China’s reputation abroad.


A leader bound by conventional political and institutional checks and subject to public scrutiny might be expected to pause and take stock at such a moment. But in regimented, censored and heavily surveilled one-party China, Xi faces few such constraints. Instead, he is doubling down on an ultra-nationalist agenda, indefinite one-man rule and ideological conformity, as defined by him. It’s rumoured he may soon declare himself “Chairman Xi”.

Xi Jinping meets the crew of an aircraft carrier at a naval port in Hainan province last December. Photograph: Li Gang/AP
Xi’s instructions to party cadres in Tibet last week typify his hardline approach to ethnic minority tensions affecting China’s periphery. He called on them to build an “impregnable fortress” to guard against “splitism”, or separatism, and ensure frontier security. He also insisted on further subjugating Tibetan Buddhism to socialist principles. This in a stolen land that has endured decades of “Sinicisation”, forced assimilation, and large-scale Han Chinese immigration.


Chinese rule in Tibet is an often-neglected 70-year story of occupation, repression, killings and self-immolations, imprisonment, destroyed monasteries and, more recently, shredded Buddhist prayer flags. The 2019 US state department report on religious freedom highlighted ongoing “forced disappearances, arrests, torture, physical abuse, including sexual abuse, and prolonged detentions without trial”. By any reckoning, these are crimes against humanity.


According to the Tibet activist Kelsang Dolma, oppressive measures practised in Tibet were the template for more recent actions taken against Uighur Muslims in Xinjiang. “Chen Quanguo, then a rising star, arrived in Tibet as the new [Chinese communist] party secretary in 2011 and rapidly transformed Tibet into one of the most pervasive police states in the world,” Dolma wrote. “In 2016, Chen became Xinjiang’s party secretary … bringing techniques practised on Tibetans to Xinjiang.”


Horror stories continue to emerge from the province, where up to a million Uighurs and other Muslim minorities have been incarcerated for “extremist” activities such as praying. In June came reports of a campaign of forced sterilisation, contraception and abortion aimed at cutting the Uighur birth rate. Last week, testimony about state-ordered hysterectomies performed on Uighur women was broadcast on television. These are crimes against humanity, too.


Xi’s obsession with total obedience, conformity and security provoked another backlash last week. Street protesters in Hohhot, capital of Inner Mongolia, and other cities denounced official moves to limit the use of the Mongolian language in schools. “Mongolian is our mother language! We are Mongolian until death!” students shouted. Inner Mongolia declared itself an independent republic in 1945. It lasted two months. The idea evidently lingers.

As in Tibet and Xinjiang, Mongolian unrest reflects wider hostility to the attempted absorption of ethnic minorities into dominant Han Chinese culture, a central tenet of Xi’s pursuit of a common national identity. Yet it also suggests that despite all the coercive tools at his disposal, his ruthless methods are stimulating rather than reducing domestic resistance.


Xi’s willingness to defiantly double-down when challenged has been keenly felt in majority Cantonese-speaking Hong Kong, too. The imposition earlier this year of a draconian Chinese state security law effectively threw down a gauntlet to Britain and the international community. There were many angry words, but nobody actually picked it up.


Now Hong Kong’s cherished democratic freedoms are swiftly being eliminated.


And then there is de facto independent Taiwan, the “renegade province” Xi threatens to seize by force. China is steadily increasing military pressure on the island. Some dismiss this as sabre-rattling. But encouraged by the west’s tame surrender of Hong Kong, Xi may yet dump Beijing’s failing policy of gradual, peaceful reunification. He may calculate instead that Donald Trump’s chaotic America, busy fighting itself, will not come to Taiwan’s defence. That could bring calamity.


Why is Xi behaving so aggressively? Perhaps he genuinely fears for the country’s internal security, cohesion and unity as it evolves into a global superpower. Cai Xia, a Beijing professor expelled from the party for criticising Xi, likened him to a mafia boss. His centralisation of power and purging of party rivals had made him a more formidable figure than Mao, she said, but he still felt insecure.


Or perhaps Xi does what he does simply because he can – because he’s lost sight of the national interest and ideas of justice and equality, and covets a personal legacy as the great unifier of the new China. There’s nobody to stop him, nobody to say “no”.


It’s the blindness and hubris that comes with absolute power. It usually ends in tears.
 

China Moves to Replace Ethnic Mongolians in Education Sector With Han Chinese

The ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has stepped up moves to eliminate the Mongolian language in schools in its northern region of Inner Mongolia, ordering Mongolian-medium primary schools to switch to Chinese-medium teaching by the third grade, RFA has learned.

The move comes after local education authorities quietly ordered Mongolian-medium schools in the region to begin switching to Chinese-medium classes in late August, sparking a regionwide protest and class boycott that saw thousands of ethnic Mongolians arrested in the crackdown that followed.

Now, the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region government has ordered Mongolian-medium primary schools to end all Mongolian-medium teaching by the third grade, delivering all lessons in Chinese.

Ethnic Mongolians holding official posts in school CCP committees and educational and cultural institutions are already being replaced with majority Han Chinese officials, according to Tie Mulun, a Japan-based member of the exile group Great Hural Assembly of Southern Mongolia.

Tie said the authorities have "various plans for the mandatory promotion of Chinese culture" to be implemented in 2021.

"Mongolian cadres are holding political meetings around the end of this year, at which they [are expected to] denounce and criticize each other," Tie told RFA on Tuesday. "

"The party secretaries and principals of Mongolian-medium schools are mostly ethnic Mongolians right now," he said.

"Starting on New Year's Day, the CCP party secretaries in Mongolian-medium schools will be replaced, with a view to making sure they are all Han Chinese by March," Tie said.

He said Mongolian-medium schools are also being required to hold a national flag-raising ceremony every morning before class.

In Bairin Right Banner, a county-like administrative division, the local education bureau is also requiring Mongolian-medium schools to enroll Han Chinese pupils, imposing a 50 percent target on principals.

"Mongolian schools in Bairin Right Banner will soon be a thing of the past, because they have ordered Mongolian-medium secondary schools to admit Han Chinese students, up to 50 percent," Tie said.

There are also plans afoot to cut back on Mongolian-language programming on state-run Inner Mongolia TV, with more shows about Han Chinese and CCP history, and an end to Mongolian-language news broadcasts, Tie told RFA.

"There will be changes to programs on Inner Mongolia TV," he said. "Mongolian-language programming may gradually disappear; [the government says] it is not appropriate for Inner Mongolia."


Han ethnonationalism

Japan-based former university professor Yang Haiying said he had heard the same news from the region.

"It shows that the CCP has stepped up its practice of Han ethnonationalism, to the extent that they want to place Han Chinese party secretaries in all of the workplaces [in culture and education]," Yang said.

"Previously, they wanted Han Chinese to hold the top posts in the party, government and military, but not so much in education," he said.

"This is a total suppression of any so-called autonomy," Yang said, in a reference to the official name of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.

Since protests over the changes to language policy rocked the region, the government has also been mass recruiting secondary school teachers from elsewhere in China to work in the region's schools, publicly available recruitment notices have revealed.

An estimated 10,000 people were arrested or placed under other forms of detention since hundreds of thousands of Mongolian students and their families staged a regionwide civil disobedience campaign against the phasing out of Mongolian in schools that were previously Mongolian-medium.

While many have since been released, some high profile activists including rights lawyer Hu Baolong and activist Yang Jindulima remain in incommunicado detention, according to Nomin, an ethnic Mongolian currently in the U.S.

Government censors have also mass deleted social media posts and accounts, and posted agents in Mongolian-language chat groups to quash any dissent or real-time news coming out of the region.
 
And then there is de facto independent Taiwan, the “renegade province” Xi threatens to seize by force. China is steadily increasing military pressure on the island. Some dismiss this as sabre-rattling. But encouraged by the west’s tame surrender of Hong Kong, Xi may yet dump Beijing’s failing policy of gradual, peaceful reunification. He may calculate instead that Donald Trump’s chaotic America, busy fighting itself, will not come to Taiwan’s defence. That could bring calamity.
That's why I've been saying China's big play will be the annexation of Taiwan. Biden is either weak or bribed, so the US Navy will be a non-factor for them. Combined with the typical actual Leftist opposed to war for any reason, the US will still be focused on domestic matters to pay attention to foreign affairs.
 
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