Attack in western China claims at least 22 lives

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This was published 9 years ago

Attack in western China claims at least 22 lives

By Andrew Jacobs

Beijing: An attack on a farmers market in the western Chinese region of Xinjiang has reportedly left at least 22 people dead and dozens injured, Radio Free Asia, a news service financed by the US government, has reported.

Radio Free Asia said on Saturday that the rampage, which took place on October 12 in Kashgar Prefecture, was carried out by four men armed with knives and explosives who attacked police officers and merchants before being shot dead by the police. Most of the victims were ethnic Han Chinese and the assailants were ethnic Uighur, the news service said, citing local police officials.

Disorder: Armed Chinese police patrol the streets of Urumqi, the main city in Xinjiang, in May.

Disorder: Armed Chinese police patrol the streets of Urumqi, the main city in Xinjiang, in May.Credit: Sanghee Liu

One officer, Hashim Eli, said the assailants were local men who arrived on motorcycles at 10.30am.

"Two of them attacked police officers patrolling the street while the other two attacked the Han Chinese stall owners who were just entering the market to open their stores," Radio Free Asia quoted him as saying.

A man who answered the phone at the police station in Bachu County, where the attack took place, declined to comment, saying he was not authorised to speak to reporters.

As of Sunday, news of the attack had not appeared in the Chinese news media, which frequently delays reporting about unrest in the region for reasons that are not entirely clear. The authorities make it difficult for foreign journalists to travel to the towns and cities in southern Xinjiang where much of the recent bloodshed has occurred.

Violence has been mounting in recent months despite a crackdown on what the authorities describe as Islamic-inspired terrorism. Human rights advocates say harsh security measures and tightened restrictions on religious practices are aggravating discontent among Uighurs, a Turkic-speaking minority who complain about job discrimination and Han migration to the region, which many see as an effort to dilute their ethnic identity.

It was not immediately clear what prompted the attack on the farmers market in Bachu County, but it appears to follow the pattern of recent attacks in which Uighur assailants, often using crude weapons, target Han civilians as well as Uighur police officers and government officials. In May, 43 people were killed, including four assailants, in an attack on an outdoor vegetable market in Urumqi, the regional capital of Xinjiang. Many of the dead were elderly Han shoppers.

In July, nearly 100 people died during a clash in Yarkand, not far from Bachu. Among the dead were 37 civilians and 59 other people, described by the state media as terrorists, who were shot by the police. Last week, a court in Kashgar sentenced 12 people to death for their role in the violence.

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Reached by phone, a front desk clerk at the Lu Xiang Grand Hotel in central Bachu said that there was scant information about what had happened at the market but that people, especially Han, felt wary about walking on the streets.

"I just hope the police can guarantee our safety," she said.

New York Times

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