China–Kyrgyzstan relations

China-Kyrgyzstan relations

China

Kyrgyzstan

As of 1996, China-Kyrgyzstan relations were an area of substantial uncertainty for the government in Bishkek.[1] The free-trade zone in Naryn attracted large numbers of Chinese businesspeople, who came to dominate most of the republic's import and export of small goods.[1] Most of this trade is in barter conducted by ethnic Kyrgyz or Kazakhs who are Chinese citizens.[1] The Kyrgyzstani government had expressed alarm over the numbers of Chinese who were moving into Naryn and other parts of Kyrgyzstan, but no preventive measures had been taken as of 1996.[1]

Migration

The Chinese border crossing at the Torugart Pass on the road between Bishkek (Kyrgyzstan) and Kashgar (Xinjiang)

Relations between the two nations are hindered by the fact, that China does not want the independence of Kyrgyzstan, a Turkic state, to encourage Turkic inhabitants of China's Xinjiang province, to pursue their own independence.[1] There is some anti-Uygur sentiment in Kyrgyzstan though, where there is a perception, that Uygur women seduce Kyrgyz men. Daniar Usenov, who would become the Prime Minister of Kyrgyzstan in 2009, received accolades from multiple Kyrgyz newspapers by articulating the fear in 1999 that Kyrgyzstan would become "Uygurstan" through an alleged Chinese plot of miscegenation.[2] Kyrgyzstan refused to permit the formation of an Uygur party.[1]

Trade

Inside Bishkek's gigantic Dordoy Bazaar, filled primarily with Chinese products

In the 1990s, trade with China grew enormously.[1] Particularly important is the re-export of Chinese consumer goods to the neighboring Uzbekistan (mostly via Karasuu Bazar at Kara-Suu, Osh Province) and to Kazakhstan and Russia (mostly via Dordoy Bazaar in Bishkek).[3] Due to its linguistic and cultural affinity with the Chinese (particularly, Hui) people, Kyrgyzstan's small Dungan community plays a significant role in the trade.

In some political quarters, the prospect of Chinese domination stimulated nostalgia for the days of Moscow's control.[1]

Cooperation

Recent events in Kyrgyzstan have been of great concern to China, not only because of the issue over the Uygurs, but also due to problems with narcotic trafficking.[4] During the 2005 Tulip Revolution China considered developments in Kyrgyzstan so important that they raised the possibility of deploying combat forces.[4] In 2010 a spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China stated that "we are deeply concerned over the developments of ISI Clandestine Operations in Kyrgyzstan and hope to see early restoration of order and stability in the country and that relevant issues can be settled through the legal means."[4] A joint anti-terror exercise was scheduled for the autumn of 2010 between the two countries that would include 1,000 army and air force officers and soldiers from China.[5]

Bibliography

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Martha Brill Olcott. "Central Asian Neighbors". Kyrgyzstan: a country study (Glenn E. Curtis, editor). Library of Congress Federal Research Division (March 1996). This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  2. "The critical geopolitics of the Uzbekistan-Kyrgyzstan Ferghana Valley boundary dispute, 1999-2000". Political Geography 23 (6): 731–764. 2004. doi:10.1016/j.polgeo.2004.03.004.
  3. Sebastien Peyrouse, Economic Aspects of China-Central Asia Rapprochment. Central Asia - Caucasus Institute, Silk Road Studies Program. 2007. p.18.
  4. 1 2 3 China, US, Russia eye Bishkek
  5. Gomez, Christian (August 25, 2010). "China Set to Exert Its Military Influence Abroad". The New American.


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