China has appointed a new military commander in restive Xinjiang, where authorities have locked up more than a million members of Muslim minorities in what they call a bid to curb terrorism and radicalism, Mainichi Japan reported.
Photo Insert: Lt. Gen. Wang Haijiang presides over a retirement ceremony for senior officers
Lt. Gen. Wang Haijiang will oversee a massive military presence in the sprawling northwestern region that borders on several unstable Central Asian states, along with Pakistan and Afghanistan, from which US troops are withdrawing.
Like Xinjiang's hardline Communist Party chief Chen Quanguo, Wang previously served in Tibet, which also hosts large numbers of troops to suppress anti-government sentiment among the native Tibetan population and guard the disputed border with India, where the two nations had a deadly clash last year.
Wang's unannounced appointment was revealed on the Xinjiang Military District's social media feed showing him presiding at a retirement ceremony for senior officers on Wednesday.
Wang saw combat during a border war with Vietnam in the early 1980s and served in an elite People's Liberation Army (PLA) unit, according to state media reports. The US withdrawal from Afghanistan is a particular concern for Beijing, which fears a resurgence of militant Islam along its border.
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