BRINGING THE TOURISTS BACK A SLICE OF LIFE IN XINJIANG FOREIGN EYES ON ETHNIC TENSIONS U.S. TAKE ON URUMQI RIOTS BEST WORST THINGS ABOUT LIFE IN XINJIANG XINJIANG CULTURE WEEK
With so much of life today based around the internet almost a year without online access may seem difficult to imagine. But that's just what happened to residents of Xinjiang in western China.
After the deadly riots there in July of last year the authorities blocked the Internet to virtually the entire population – a ban that lasted in varying degrees until just last week.
Take a moment and imagine a world where everything you own can be traced on the internet- where everything from the toothbrush you use and the car you drive pulsates with a virtual life of its own. This complex-seeming idea is called ‘The Internet of Things’- and China is ready to tap into its growing market. BON’s Kelda Yuen has more on the risks and benefits China may face as more cities announce plans to implement this potentially revolutionary concept.
"Nearly 2000 miles from Beijing in the shadow of the Silk Road ski resort, thousands of people living behind me are trying to make a living from the tourist industry. But after July that hasn't been easy."
One such person is Ma Axi, from the ethnic Hui group that makes up 5 percent of the region's population. Like dozens of others on this road, she and her husband run a bed-and-breakfast of sorts, known as a nongjiale in Chinese, where people come to eat and sometimes stay the night. Axi describes business as "good" over the past six years, and it's brought the family an annual income of around 17-thousand dollars.
Now, just as people thought one of the coldest winters in decades was coming to an end, news that a new round of snowfall is threatening to coat northern and western China.
It's been a cold, hard winter, and there's seemingly no end in sight. With China's Meteorological Administration forecasting a new round of snowfall over the coming few days, relief efforts across the country have been stepped up.
But although the situation in NW.China's Xinjiang Autonomous Region has been improving, it remains one of the worst hit regions in terms of snowfall, and the news that there's more to come is very unwelcome indeed.
Xinjiang province in China's northwest is a hotbed of ethnic tensions, with much of the majority Uygur population angry at the migration of Han Chinese to a region they want as an independent state.
Now, as BON's Andrew Livingstone reports, in an effort to ease friction by improving living standards, these shanty towns are being replaced by modern apartments.