China blasts West's anti-terrorism 'double standards'
Source: ahram
China
accuses the US of having 'double standards' in combating terrorism,
using counter-terrorism as a 'cheap excuse' for interventions
China's state media on Friday accused Western countries of "double
standards" in their fight against terrorism, ahead of the 10th
anniversary of the 9/11 attacks.
The comment piece by the official Xinhua news agency blamed Washington
in particular for turning a "blind eye" to the damage caused by
extremists in Russia's Chechnya and in China's own far-western region of
Xinjiang.
Nearly 10 years after 9/11, Xinhua said the fight against terror was
"far from over", with terrorists changing tactics and increasing
"collaboration with separatists and religious extremists".
"A bigger challenge to the world's anti-terror effort, though, is a lack of a common standard," the comment said.
"In particular, the United States and its Western allies have
repeatedly used double standards on anti-terror issues, which have
obstructed the progress of the global effort."
Xinhua pointed to the United States' refusal in 2009 to extradite back
to China members of its mainly Muslim Uighur minority held at US
military prison camp Guantanamo Bay -- who were cleared of wrongdoing --
as an example of double standards.
The United States refused to repatriate the Uighurs on the basis they would face almost certain persecution.
Uighurs populate the Xinjiang region, which has experienced several
outbreaks of ethnic violence in recent years -- much of which Beijing
has blamed on extremism, separatism and terrorism.
But some experts doubt that terrorist cells operate there, and say the
violence stems more from long-standing resentment against the government
among Uighurs in the region.
Xinhua also accused Western countries of using counter-terrorism as a
"cheap excuse" to intervene in other nations' internal affairs.
"Obviously, such a double standard can only harm the global anti-terror effort," it said.
"Obviously, such a double standard can only harm the global anti-terror effort," it said.
Foreign ministry spokesman Liu Weimin, meanwhile, told reporters Friday
that terrorism "has not been eliminated and severe challenges still
exist".
"We believe it is imperative to make greater efforts on development
issues such as improving people's livelihood, eradicating poverty and
injustice, facilitating dialogue between civilisations and religious
tolerance so as to remove the root cause of terrorism," he said.
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