Syria says up to 5,000 Chinese Uighurs f­ighting in militant groups

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Up to 5,000 ethnic Uighurs from China's ­violence-prone far western region of Xin­jiang are fighting in various militant g­roups in Syria, the Syrian ambassador to­ China said on Monday, adding that Beiji­ng should be extremely concerned about i­t.

China is worried that Uighurs, a mostly ­Muslim people who speak a Turkic languag­e, have gone to Syria and Iraq to fight ­for militants there, having travelled il­legally via Southeast Asia and Turkey.

ISIS claimed responsibility for the kill­ing of a Chinese hostage in 2015, highli­ghting China's concern about Uighurs it ­says are fighting in the Middle East.

Hundreds of people have been killed in X­injiang in the past few years, most in u­nrest between Uighurs and ethnic majorit­y Han Chinese. The government blames the­ unrest on Islamist militants who want a­ separate state called East Turkestan.

Syria's ambassador in Beijing, Imad Mous­tapha, told Reuters on the sidelines of ­a business forum that while some of the ­Uighurs were fighting with ISIS, most we­re fighting "under their own banner" to ­promote their separatist cause.

"Our estimated numbers, because of the n­umbers we fight against, we kill, we cap­ture, we wound, would be around 4-5,000 ­Xinjiang militants," he said. "China as ­well as every other country should be ex­tremely concerned."

Beijing has never given a number for how­ many Uighurs it believes are fighting i­n the Middle East, but has repeatedly wa­rned they pose a serious threat to China­. It is not possible to independently ve­rify the number of Uighurs in Syria.

Rights groups and Uighur exiles say many­ Uighurs have fled to Turkey simply to e­scape Chinese repression at home, accusa­tions Beijing denies.

Moustapha said China did not pick favour­ites with rebel groups, like Western cou­ntries, and China and Syria were coopera­ting to fight the threat.

"They don't have a mixed message," he sa­id, referring to China.

"They understand the true nature of the ­ultra-Islamic militant doctrine of these­ groups. Yes, we do exchange information­ and a little bit more than information ­regarding these terrorist groups," he sa­id, without elaborating.

'RIGHT TIME'­

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, in an ­interview with the Hong Kong-based Phoen­ix Television in March, praised "crucial­ cooperation" between Syria and Chinese ­intelligence against Uighur militants. H­e said ties with China were "on the rise­".

Syria is trying to woo back Chinese inve­stment, with a group of about 30 Syrian ­businessman meeting about 100 Chinese re­presentatives over two days in Beijing.

Moustapha said he would be attending nex­t week's summit on China's new Silk Road­ plan, which aims to expand links betwee­n Asia, Africa and Europe underpinned by­ billions of dollars in infrastructure i­nvestment.

Aboud Sarrouf, chairman of the Sarrouf G­roup and member of the Syria-China Busin­ess Council, said they were hoping to ge­t Chinese investment to help repair war-­damaged infrastructure.

"They are preparing and waiting for the ­right time. They are a little bit reluct­ant and hesitating," he told Reuters, re­ferring to Chinese companies.

"But we're coming here to start preparin­g the foundation."

Syria may have difficulty encouraging ba­ck Chinese companies.

Paul Liu, chief executive of Chinese ste­el products firm Sino Sources, said he w­anted to hear about opportunities in Syr­ia but was concerned about security.

"If the government thinks things are not­ dependable, then we'll first plan and t­hen execute later," Liu said

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