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31 Dead in Attack in China’s Muslim Xinjiang

31 Dead in Attack in China’s Muslim Xinjiang
folder_openChina access_time9 years ago
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Local Editor

At least 31 people were killed and more than 90 injured Thursday when two vehicles ploughed into a market and explosives were thrown in China's restive Xinjiang region, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

31 Dead in Attack in China’s Muslim XinjiangTwo off-road vehicles drove into a crowd in the regional capital Urumqi, with one of them exploding, Xinhua said, in what state-run media called the latest "serious terrorist incident" to hit Xinjiang, home to mostly Muslim Uighurs.
Pictures posted on Weibo, a Chinese equivalent of Twitter, showed victims lying in a tree-lined street, as others sat on flimsy stools.

Flames rose in the background, while other images showed smoke billowing over market stalls behind a police roadblock. None of the photographs could immediately be verified.
A witness at the market told Xinhua he heard a dozen "big bangs" during the incident, which happened at about 7:50am, when Chinese morning markets, which usually sell fresh groceries, are commonly crowded with shoppers.
"There were multiple strong explosions in the morning market at the Cultural Palace in Urumqi," wrote one Weibo poster who said he was less than 100 meters from the scene.

He further stated: "I saw flames and heavy smoke as vehicles and goods were on fire while vendors escaped leaving their goods behind."
All the injured had been sent to hospital, the Xinjiang regional government's web portal Tianshan said.

The vast, resource-rich far-western region has seen periodic violence which has increased and sometimes spread beyond it in recent months.
Critics say the security threat in Xinjiang is exaggerated by Beijing to justify hard-line measures, and instead point to economic inequality and cultural and religious repression of Uighurs as causes of unrest.
Thursday's blasts came a day after state media reported that courts in Xinjiang jailed 39 people for offenses including spreading "terrorist videos".

The 39 were given prison sentences of up to 15 years, the state run China News Service said, adding that several had "organized, led and participated" in terrorist organizations.
Rights groups say the tensions in Xinjiang are driven by cultural oppression, intrusive security measures and immigration by majority Han Chinese which have led to decades of discrimination and economic inequality. Beijing says that its policies in the region have brought prosperity and higher living standards.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team