Analysts see Pakistan terror links to Xinjiang attack

ganesh177

Senior Member
Joined
May 18, 2009
Messages
1,308
Likes
1,657
Country flag
China says: Xinjiang attack masterminded by terrorists trained in Pakistan

BEIJING: China said on Monday that Islamic extremists were behind an attack on the eve of the Muslim fasting month in the restive western region of Xinjiang that left 11 people dead.

The attack in Kashgar city on Sunday afternoon was the latest violence to shake the region where Muslim Uighurs have long resented the presence of Han Chinese and religious and political controls imposed by Beijing.
It came less than 24 hours after two small blasts hit the city, which is dominated by Uighurs.


"A group of religious extremists led by culprits trained in overseas terrorist camps were behind the weekend attack," a Kashgar government statement said.


An initial police investigation found that the leaders of the group behind the attack had learned about explosives and firearms in Pakistan at a camp of the separatist "East Turkestan Islamic Movement," it said.


Police shot dead five people and arrested four others after they stormed a restaurant, set in on fire after killing the owner and a waiter, and then ran onto the street and hacked to death four people, Xinhua news agency reported.
For the ruling Communist Party, the latest violence presents another tricky test of its control in Xinjiang, where Uighur and Han Chinese residents view each other with suspicion. Beijing has been wary of contagion from uprisings across the Arab world inspiring challenges to Party power in China.


"This was another violent terrorist action by a small group of foes organized and planned under special conditions," the local government said.


Captured suspects had confessed that the ringleaders had earlier fled to Pakistan and joined the "East Turkestan Islamic Movement" and had received firearms and explosives training before infiltrating back into China, it said.
"Their malign intention behind this terrorist violence was to sabotage inter-ethnic unity and harm social stability, provoking ethnic hatred and creating ethnic conflict, splitting Xinjiang off from the motherland, casting the people of every ethnic group into a disastrous abyss."
Xinhua, describing deserted streets and bloody scenes, said many residents had gathered around the area, holding clubs for self-defence, describing deserted streets and bloody scenes.
"There are very few people on the streets, and unless it's something urgent, I won't go out," a Han Chinese businesswoman in Kashgar told Reuters by phone, adding that there was a heavy police presence in the city. She would give only her surname, Jiang.


In July 2009, the regional capital, Urumqi, was rocked by violence between majority Han Chinese and minority Uighurs that killed nearly 200 people, many of them Han Chinese.


China sees Xinjiang as strategically vital, and Beijing has shown no sign of loosening its grip on the territory, which accounts for a sixth of the country's land mass and holds deposits of oil and gas.
Critics of Chinese policy in Xinjiang and advocates of Uighur self-rule say that Beijing has exaggerated the influence of terror groups and its tough policies have only deepened Uighur anger by smothering peaceful protest.
Kashgar lies in Xinjiang's south, where Uighurs predominate.


Earlier on Sunday, Chinese media reported that two men wielding knives attacked a truck driver and then a crowd of people following two explosions in Kashgar on Saturday night, leaving eight people dead including one of the attackers.


Eighteen people including 14 "rioters" were killed in an attack on a police station in Xinjiang on July 18, according to the government.


Xinjiang attack masterminded by terrorists trained in Pakistan | World | DAWN.COM
 

Dovah

Untermensch
Senior Member
Joined
May 23, 2011
Messages
5,614
Likes
6,793
Country flag
Third such thread has been posted today!!
 

niharjhatn

Regular Member
Joined
Sep 26, 2010
Messages
899
Likes
391
Unfortunate for the lives lost, but expecting something like this to be revealed for a while now.

It is both a reflection on the CCP's arrogance and stupidity.

Arrogance in trying so hard to control religion, especially among the minority groups.

And Stupidity in dealing with Pakistan, not expecting something like this to happen. CCP should learn that for muslim nations, defence help not withstanding, religious ties run deepest of all.
 

Oracle

New Member
Joined
Mar 31, 2010
Messages
8,120
Likes
1,566
Use the report button to notify Mods of duplicate threads.

It is troublesome to look through each and every thread and post and practically impossible. Also posts such as "Duplicate thread, Mods please merge" do not raise a flag, but the report button does.
 

thakur_ritesh

Ambassador
Joined
Feb 19, 2009
Messages
4,435
Likes
1,733
I don't think your anti-Communism remarks add no credit to the credibility of Hindu

U sound trying to tell ah, Hindu is pro-Commie, so it must be pro China, ah ha so it must have some insider info from China. Really?

Yet to see other sources outside India
Ohimalaya,

i thought if i would revert to the point made above, you would see it as no more than a rant and so i thought i would leave it at that till the time something more substantial emerges, so here comes from a pakistani news source

"A group of religious extremists led by culprits trained in overseas terrorist camps were behind the weekend attack," a Kashgar government statement said.


Captured suspects had confessed that the ringleaders had earlier fled to Pakistan and joined the "East Turkestan Islamic Movement" and had received firearms and explosives training before infiltrating back into China, it said.

Xinjiang attack masterminded by terrorists trained in Pakistan | World | DAWN.COM
as i said, hindu is pretty much what it is and when they are covering news about china and news coming from china the same is either a play being enacted on behalf of chinese and/or they have authentic news about that place, and in here they were quoting people from china, so the news to begin with was as authentic as it would have been, and you dont ever play around with people who butter up the bread for you, and hindu knows its limits well.
 

sant

Regular Member
Joined
Jul 19, 2011
Messages
51
Likes
12
Terr attack in china

Pakistan is like terrorist nest.(Like cockroach's nest). UN security agency should take initiative destroy source of Pak terr network (Pak army amd isi).
 

Dovah

Untermensch
Senior Member
Joined
May 23, 2011
Messages
5,614
Likes
6,793
Country flag
Sorry Oracle but I am gonna say it again. :becky:
Fourth thread on the same topic thus far today.
Mods please merge.
 

Yusuf

GUARDIAN
Super Mod
Joined
Mar 24, 2009
Messages
24,324
Likes
11,757
Country flag
Come up with a good reason for me to let this thread continue.
 

Yusuf

GUARDIAN
Super Mod
Joined
Mar 24, 2009
Messages
24,324
Likes
11,757
Country flag
Oh come on, the OP in that thread didn't warrant a merger.
 

Sikh_warrior

Professional
Joined
May 18, 2010
Messages
504
Likes
273
This is FALSE propaganda by RAW, MOSSAD and CIA against two all weather friends.

they want to take over pak nukes and make chinese impotent!
 

Yusuf

GUARDIAN
Super Mod
Joined
Mar 24, 2009
Messages
24,324
Likes
11,757
Country flag
Wasn't he just there in China on a secret visit to have a "strategic dialog" (probably read as aid)
 

maomao

Veteran Hunter of Maleecha
Senior Member
Joined
Apr 7, 2010
Messages
5,033
Likes
8,354
Country flag
Beijing Points to Pakistan After Ethnic Violence

China pointed a finger at Pakistan, one of its closest foreign partners, as it blamed one of two deadly weekend attacks in the northwestern Xinjiang region on Muslim extremists trained across the Pakistani border."¬

Police also "executed on the spot" two more suspected attackers in the city of Kashgar, according to a local government statement, while paramilitary police with shotguns and automatic weapons patrolled the streets of the city of Kashgar to prevent further unrest as local authorities said 20 people were killed in all in the attacks by knife-wielding members of the Uighur ethnic minority on Saturday and Sunday in a second week of violence to rock Xinjiang."¬

The city government hasn't said whom it blames for Saturday's attack, when it says that two Uighur men hijacked a truck near a popular night market, plowed into a crowd, then leapt out and stabbed eight people to death. The crowd killed one attacker.

But it said Monday that an "initial probe" had shown that leaders of Sunday's attack on a restaurant, in which 11 people died, had received explosives and firearms training in Pakistan-based camps of the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, also known as ETIM.

China has long accused Uighur groups waging a sometimes violent campaign for independence of being part of ETIM, which it says has links to al Qaeda and other terrorist organizations and has sent people to train and fight in Pakistan and Afghanistan. But China rarely points a finger so directly and publicly at Pakistan, suggesting to some analysts that it is either unhappy with Islamabad's counterterrorism efforts or anxious to portray the violence as emanating from abroad.

The allegation is all the more striking as Pakistan, facing a crisis in ties with the U.S. since the killing of Osama bin Laden, has been working hard to portray China as its "all-weather friend" and an alternative source of civilian and military aid. Pakistani officials said in May that China had agreed to take over operation of the strategically positioned Pakistani port of Gwadar, and that Islamabad had asked Beijing to build a naval base there.

China's accusation joins a similar chorus from two of Pakistan's other neighbors, India and Afghanistan, which accuse it of failing to act against militant camps on its soil.

A spokesman for Pakistan's Foreign Ministry couldn't be reached to comment Monday on China's allegation. But the Pakistani Foreign Ministry said in a statement it was confident that the local and central authorities in China would "succeed in frustrating evil designs of the terrorists, extremists and separatists, who constitute an evil force." It also said that Pakistan would "continue to extend its full cooperation and support" to China against ETIM.

A senior security official also said that over the past few years Pakistan had handed over to Chinese authorities many militant leaders who were operating from Pakistan.

The Kashgar government said its information was based on a confession by a captured suspect. The government also said that four suspects had been shot dead at the scene of the attack on Sunday, and a fifth had died in the hospital from gunshot wounds. Authorities said on Monday police had killed two other suspects, both Uighurs, while trying to arrest them—and had offered 100,000 yuan, or about $15,540, for information leading to their arrests.

It said Sunday's attackers had set off an explosion that triggered a fire in a restaurant, then started attacking people with knives, killing six civilians and injuring 15 others, including three police officers. The 12 civilians wounded were members of China's majority Han ethnic group, it said. The government had earlier said that three people were killed on Sunday.

Kashgar authorities Monday said police had killed two other suspects, who they said fled the scene of Sunday's attack, while trying to arrest them.

Authorities identified the men as 29-year-old Memtieli Tiliwaldi and 34-year-old Turson Hasan—both Uighurs—and had offered 100,000 yuan, or about $15,540, for information leading to their arrests.

The two men's mugshots were plastered around Kashgar on Monday, as hundreds of armed police manned road blocks and patrolled the city on foot, while black-uniformed counterterrorist SWAT teams cordoned off the sites of the two attacks.

The normally bustling city streets were eerily quiet as many ethnic Han Chinese settlers, who appear to have been the targets of the attacks, stayed home, according to several Uighur and Han Chinese residents. Most Uighurs interviewed rejected the official account of the attacks, saying they were the result of long-running tensions between the Uighurs and the growing numbers of Han Chinese settlers.

"You shouldn't go out at night for the moment—there could be more problems," said one 34-year-old Uighur mechanic who asked not to be identified by name."They say the people came from Pakistan. They say they were international terrorists, but that's not true. They were local people angry with the government and with the Han Chinese."

Some Uighurs said they were concerned about revenge attacks by Han Chinese, as happened in 2009 when almost 200 people were killed in interethnic riots in the regional capital, Urumqi.

Most Han Chinese residents interviewed said they believed they were the targets of the weekend attacks, and that there could be more in the near future.

One 55-year-old Han Chinese woman, who runs a restaurant near the one attacked on Sunday, said she had seen the police pursuing the suspects afterward.

"There was a lot of blood on the street; we were really scared," said the woman, who asked to be identified only by her surname, Jin.

"We were informed this morning by the local government to close our doors for three days...Now we just stay at home, no one dares to go out. People can not buy anything, even vegetables, as there aren't any vendors on the street."

The latest attacks came just under two weeks after police shot dead 14 Uighur rioters in the Xinjiang city of Hotan after they attacked a police station, setting fire to it and killing two police officers and two civilians, according to state media.

It also comes as party leaders grapple with resurgent ethnic unrest in recent months in Inner Mongolia, which lies to the east of Xinjiang, and continuing tensions in Tibet, just south of Xinjiang.

Zhang Chunxian, the Communist Party secretary of Xinjiang, held an emergency meeting in Urumqi after the attacks and ordered a crackdown on religious extremism and "illegal religious activities," according to Xinhua.

The Germany-based World Uyghur Congress said the recent violence was due to China's repressive policies in the region, and warned of an even more severe crackdown in the aftermath of the recent attacks.

China Points to Pakistan in Xinjiang Attack - WSJ.com
 

The Messiah

Bow Before Me!
Senior Member
Joined
Aug 25, 2010
Messages
10,809
Likes
4,619
I hear han population of china was less than a quarter 50 years ago but now is the majority ?
 

civfanatic

Retired
Ambassador
Joined
Sep 8, 2009
Messages
4,562
Likes
2,572
I hear han population of china was less than a quarter 50 years ago but now is the majority ?
In Tibet and Xinjiang, not all of China. In China proper (meaning PRC minus Tibet, Xinjiang, and Manchuria) Hans have been the majority for several centuries. They've been the majority in Manchuria and Inner Mongolia since the Qing Dynasty, and in South China since the Song Dynasty.
 
Joined
Feb 16, 2009
Messages
29,885
Likes
48,597
Country flag
This goes to show that US influence is much greater in Pakistan than China will ever have.
 

Global Defence

New threads

Articles

Top