China’s Hu skips G8 to deal with Xinjiang riots

URUMQI, China (Reuters) – Chinese President Hu  Jintao abandoned plans to attend a G8 summit in Italy yesterday, returning home early to deal with ethnic violence in  the restive northwestern region of Xinjiang.

The official state-run Xinhua news agency said Hu had left  for China “due to the situation” in energy-rich Xinjiang, which  borders central Asia, where 156 people died in weekend riots  between the Han Chinese majority and minority Muslim Uighurs.

State Councilor Dai Bingguo will attend the G8 summit in  Hu’s place, the report added.

The summit was due to open in the central Italian city of  L’Aquila later today and Hu had been scheduled to join  the talks tomorrow. Hu arrived in Italy on Sunday and had  visited Florence yesterday.

Urumqi, Xinjiang’s regional capital, woke up after a curfew  that authorities imposed after thousands of Han Chinese stormed  through its streets demanding redress, and sometimes bloody  vengeance, after Uighurs rioted on Sunday.     The city was quiet, except for soldiers shouting in unison  as they went about their morning exercises.

Anti-riot police blocked off main streets, while armoured  personnel carriers cruised back and forth.

Late yesterday, the mobs of Han Chinese wielding  clubs, metal bars, cleavers and axes had melted away. But many  of the Han Chinese protesters said the killings of Sunday had  left a deep stain of anger that would last.

“How can I feel my family is safe after women and children  were slain on these streets,” one of the protesters said later  yesterday. He gave only his surname, Zhong.

“Security is a basic human right, isn’t it? If the  government can’t protect it, we’ll have to do it ourselves.”

On the other side of Urumqi’s now tensely divided  neighbourhoods, Uighurs protested yesterday, defying rows of  anti-riot police and telling reporters that their husbands,  brothers and sons had been taken away in indiscriminate  arrests.

Xinjiang has long been a tightly controlled hotbed of  ethnic tensions, fostered by an economic gap between many  Uighurs and Han Chinese, government controls on religion and  culture and an influx of Han Chinese migrants who now are the  majority in most key cities, including Urumqi.