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I. A Unified
Multi-Ethnic State, and Regional Autonomy for Ethnic Minorities
Since its founding in 1921, the Communist Party of China
(CPC) has made active efforts to solve China's ethnic problems. It successfully formulated
and implemented policies concerning ethnic minorities, and united
and led the people of all ethnic groups to win the final victory of
the New Democratic Revolution. The first session of the Chinese People's Political Consultative
Conference (CPPCC) was convened in September 1949, on the
eve of the founding of the People's Republic of China. At the suggestion of
the CPC, deputies of different ethnic groups and political parties held consultations,
and decided to proclaim the establishment of the People's Republic of
China as a united multi-ethnic state. The conference also adopted the Common
Program of the CPPCC, which actually served as a provisional constitution of
the new republic. A chapter in the Common Program specially expounded
on New China's ethnic policies, and clearly defined regional autonomy
for ethnic minorities as a basic policy of the state. This major historical
decision was made out of consideration for the particular situation of
China.
(1) The Long Existence of a United
Multi-Ethnic State Is the Historical Basis for Practicing Regional Autonomy for
Ethnic Minorities
China is a united multi-ethnic state
with long history. As early as 221 BC, the Qin Dynasty (221-206 BC), the first
feudal empire in the history of China, brought about unification to the country
for the first time. The subsequent Han Dynasty (206 BC-220AD) further consolidated
the country's unification. Administrativeareas known as jun (prefecture)
and xian (county) were establishedacross the country, and uniform systems
of law, language, calendar,carriage, currency, and weights and measures were
adopted. This promoted exchanges between different areas and ethnic groups, and
created the fundamental framework for the political, economic and cultural development
of China as a united multi-ethnic state over the next 2,000 years or more.
Later dynasties -- whether they were established by Han people, such as the
Sui (581-618), Tang (618-907), Song (960-1279) and Ming (1368-1644), or by other
ethnic minority groups, such as the Yuan (1271-1368) and Qing (1644-1911)-- all
considered themselves as "orthodox reigns" of China and regarded the
establishment of a united multi-ethnic state their highest political goal.
Almost all the central authorities of the
feudal dynasties adopted a policy of "rule by custom" toward the ethnic minorities.Under
this policy, the political unification of China was maintained while the
ethnic minorities were allowed to preserve their own social systems and cultures.
The Han Dynasty created the Office of Protector-General of the Western
Regions in what is now the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, and the Tang Dynasty
established Anxi and Beiting Offices of Protector-General in the same area.
These organizations administered only political and military affairs. The central
authorities of the Qing Dynasty adopted different measures for governing the
ethnic-minority areas in accordance with local characteristics. In the
areas where Mongolians lived, a league-banner (prefecture-county) administrative
system was exercised. In Tibet, the central government sent Grand Ministers
Resident in Tibet and exercised a religion-political rule of lamas and nobles
by granting honorific titles to the two most important Living Buddhas, namely,
the DalaiLama and the Panchen Lama. In the areas where Uygur people lived
in compact communities, a Beg (a generic term for chiefs of Moslemgroups appointed
by the central government) system was adopted. Inplaces where ethnic peoples
lived in south China, a system of tusi("aboriginal office" literally) was
introduced. Under the old social system it is impossible for all ethnic groups
to enjoy equality in the modern sense of the word, and strife, conflicts and
even wars among them were inevitable. Still, the long-standing existence of a
united, multi-ethnic state in Chinese history greatly enhanced the political,
economic and cultural exchanges among different ethnic groups, and constantly
promoted the identification of all ethnic groups with the central government,
and their allegiance to it.
(2) The Patriotic Spirit Formed
During the Fight Against Foreign Invasions in Modern Times Is the Political
Basis for Practicing Regional Autonomy for Ethnic Minorities
For 110 years from the Opium War in 1840, China
suffered repeated invasions and bullying by imperialist powers, and Chinese people
of all ethnic groups were subject to oppression and slavery. At the
critical moment when China faced the danger of being carvedup, and when the nation
was on the verge of being subjugated, the Chinese people of all ethnic groups
united as one, and put up the most arduous and bitter struggles against foreign
invaders in order to uphold the country's sovereignty, and win national independence
and liberation. During the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression
(1937-1945), in particular, Chinese people of all ethnic groups, sharing
a bitter hatred for the aggressors, rose in united resistance against the
Japanese invaders to safeguard their homes. Many anti-Japanese forces whose members
were mainly of ethnic minorities, such as the Hui Detachment and the Inner
Mongolia Guerrillas, waged heroic struggles against the Japanese invaders, and
contributed greatly to the final victory inthe war against fascism. While fighting
against imperialist invasions, the Chinese people of all ethnic groups also
waged struggles against separatist plots to bring about "independence" for Tibet,
"East Turkistan" and "Manchukuo" by a small number of separatists with the
support of imperialist powers. Through their struggles against foreign invasions,
the Chinese people of all ethnic groups keenly realized that the great
motherland is the common homeland of them all, and that only when China's sovereignty
and territorial integrity are maintained will all ethnic groups truly
come to enjoy freedom, equality, development and progress. People of all ethnic
groups must further enhance their unity to safeguard the country's sovereignty
and territorial integrity, and make China a prosperous and rich
country.
(3) The Population Distribution
Pattern of China's Ethnic Groups, in Which They Live Together over Vast Areas
While Some Live in Compact Communities in Small Areas, Plus the Disparities
Between Different Areas in Access to Natural Resources and Stage of Development
Make It Pragmatic to Adopt the Policy of Regional Autonomy for Ethnic
Minorities.
The history of the evolution of
China's ethnic groups is one offrequent contacts and intermingling. In its long
historical development, the various ethnic groups moved frequently from one
place to another and gradually formed the pattern of living together over vast
areas while some live in individual compact communities in small areas. The Han
people, with the largest population, are distributed all over China, while the
populations of the other 55 ethnic groups are relatively small, and most of them
live in the frontier areas. Still, they can be found in all the administrative
regions above county level in the hinterland. Given this population distribution
pattern, establishing ethnic autonomous areas of different types at different
administrative levels based on regions where ethnic minorities live in compact
communities is conducive to the harmony and stability of relationsbetween
different ethnic groups and their common development.
The regions inhabited by ethnic minorities in compact communities are large, and rich in natural resources. But comparedwith other regions, particularly with developed regions, the levelof economic and social development in these regions is relatively backward. Regional autonomy for ethnic minorities enables them to bring into full play their regional advantages and promote exchanges and cooperation between minority areas and other areas, and consequently quickens the pace of modernization both in the minority areas and the country as a whole and helps achieve commondevelopment of all regions and prosperity for all ethnic groups.
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