2018年8月18日,中心研究员王晋于中央电视台英语频道(CGTN)发表时事评论文章,全文如下:
I woke as the airplane landed and realized that I was in Kashgar in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, the most western city of China. Yu Qiuyu, one Chinese foremost writers, once claimed: “If you hope to be a leading writer, go to western China, go to Xinjiang especially.”
As the Chinese city most neighboring Central Asia, Kashgar might be an example of Xinjiang and western China's social development as played out on a miniature scale.
The history of Kashgar can be traced back further than 2000 years and, in Uygur, the name translates as “The center of jade”.
Historically, Kashgar was an important hub connecting China to Central and Southern Asia. This splendid history and civilization marked Kashgar as an important city on the Silk Road.
However, Kashgar is also a sensitive city. Ever since the 1990s, when Islamic extremism gradually expanded and became rooted in Xinjiang, Kashgar, briefly became the hometown of some Islamic extremists.
The security situation became so serious that terrorist attacks in Xinjiang, especially in Kashgar, became common, and tension between different ethnic groups in Xinjiang were so palpable that many small incidents turned into massive clashes.
When my family found out about my planned trip to Kashgar, they were concerned and asked: “Is it really safe to travel there?" and "Be careful. Stay inside!"
But, after my arrival, I decided not to lock myself in the hotel and to instead walk around the city and get to know the locals. When I was on the street, I was impressed by how safe Kashgar felt. It was a lot like many other cities in China.
When foreigners come to Beijing, Shanghai and many other Chinese cities,
they are often impressed by how safe it is, even late night.
In Kashgar, very little security could be seen on the streets and people travel freely with their families. Uygur and Han people live there together like friends and brothers.
I was so curious about how the different ethnic minorities feel about each other. Merem Nisha, a mother of two who works at a hotel, was extremely positive about the improving safety there.
“More and more people come to visit Kashgar,” Nisha said, “and the more people who come here, the more money I can make and put towards improving my family’s situation. I am a Uygur, but I have many Han friends. Kashgar welcomes everyone, we are all brothers and sisters.”
Chen Hui, a taxi driver who took me to the old city of Kashgar, also expressed his solidarity with the Uygur people in Kashgar: “Look, we live in the same city, we are a big family. I cannot say that there are no Islamic extremists and terrorists here, but these extremists and terrorists are our common enemy.”
When night falls, many people go out to dance, eat and take pictures. I asked an Uygur couple who were walking by if it was safe here. “Absolutely,” they replied, “It is a safe and beautiful city, and the people are friendly here. Kashgar is safe, and it has been years since the last terrorist attack.”
Xinjiang has become a sensitive topic lately because of its sensitive environment. Many rumors and fake news stories have emerged in the Western and Arab media, sparking discussions and considerations of hypothetical scenarios.
According to many of these reports, Xinjiang has become a hotbed of trouble and "ethnic suppression”, and Kashgar is supposedly now a city where ethnic cleaning, suppression and family separations take place.
However, when you go to Xinjiang, when you talk to residents of Kashgar, when you travel around the city at night, you can sense the harmony between the different ethnic groups.
The real Kashgar can only be touched, felt and understood with close observation, not with fake reports and rumors from those so-called “observers” who are reporting from thousands of miles away.