Security Forces Said to Have Killed 12 in Raid in Western China

t_co

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http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/19/world/asia/raid-xinjiang-china.html

BEIJING — Security forces in China's far western Xinjiang region last month shot and killed at least 12 men and wounded 20 others during a raid on what the authorities described as a "terrorist facility," Radio Free Asia reported Wednesday.

The incident took place more than three weeks ago in a small village near the city of Kashgar, but details only emerged in recent days. Local officials told Radio Free Asia that the men had been building and testing explosives at a desert encampment near Jigdejay village; local police officers, reached by telephone Wednesday, declined to comment or said they knew nothing about the raid.

The episode comes at a time of escalating tension between the Chinese authorities and the region's ethnic Uighurs, a Muslim, Turkic-speaking people who have long complained of restrictive policies they say are aimed at curtailing their language and religious practices. Since June, at least 100 people have been killed during clashes in the oasis towns and cities that hug the vast Taklamakan Desert in southern Xinjiang, home to the majority of China's nine million Uighurs.

Although some of the violence has involved Uighurs attacking Han Chinese in what analysts describe as improvised acts of ethnic bloodletting, exile groups and human rights organizations say much of the bloodshed has resulted from harsh police tactics against protests and unauthorized religious gatherings. Chinese officials usually describe the same incidents as acts of terrorism by "separatists" or religious extremists, although they rarely provide details or evidence to back up these claims.

As with much of the recent violence in Xinjiang, the Chinese state media did not cover the raid on Aug. 23 in Jigdejay, and many of the details remained murky. Local officials and residents told Radio Free Asia that dozens of armed police officers swarmed a covert munitions center where about 30 men had gathered.

One resident said the police were tipped off to the presence of the encampment after a rocket launcher the men were trying to build accidentally exploded, killing one of them. "They were hiding inside there and practicing how to make some sort of explosives," Yasin Ahun-Karim, a local religious leader, told Radio Free Asia, which is financed by the American government. "Their activities were discovered by a police helicopter, and police acted immediately to clean up the place."

Another resident who witnessed the raid said the dead were buried on the spot.

The incident in Jigdejay followed another deadly raid three days earlier in nearby Yilkiqi township, where at least 15 Uighur men were shot and killed as they prayed together. The authorities described the dead as terrorists engaged in "illegal religious activities" and said they were training for an attack, although the only weapons recovered at the scene were knives and axes.

In recent weeks, the authorities have been announcing stiff sentences for those arrested during the latest spate of unrest. Last week, three Uighur men were sentenced to death for their role in a bloody clash in Lukchun township last spring that left as many as 46 people dead. In August, two other men were given the death penalty for another clash near Kashgar that killed at least 21 people.
Interesting that RFA is the only outlet which reports such an incident.
 

W.G.Ewald

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Original article at RFA:

Up to 12 Uyghurs Shot Dead in Raid on Xinjiang 'Munitions Center'

Authorities in China's restive northwestern region of Xinjiang have shot dead up to a dozen Uyghurs and wounded 20 others in a raid on what they said was a "terrorist" facility, according to local officials and residents.

Police confirmed the shooting in Poskam county (in Chinese, Zepu) near the Silk Road city of Kashgar in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, home to some 9 million ethnic minority Muslim Uyghurs who say they have long suffered discrimination and religious controls under Beijing's policies.
 

t_co

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From the same article:

Eyewitness

A Kuybagh resident who claimed he witnessed the raid but spoke on condition of anonymity said that 12 people had died in the incident.

"That's right, they killed 12 people," the Kuybagh resident said when asked about the police operation.

"[They were] training. The police discovered them. It was daytime. We were just in front, standing there. We saw them firing their weapons," he said.

He said the camp was run by local Uyghurs and raided by 70-80 armed police.

"They had made a huge weapon," he said. "The armed police went and raided them, and that was that.... There were more than 20 of them, and 12 of them were killed. Those who died were buried [right there]."

He said the camp had been discovered after the Uyghurs had made rocket launchers that exploded on testing, killing one of them.

"One of them blew their own head off, or they wouldn't have been discovered," he said.

"[We live] on the edge [of the county town]. The Gobi desert is right next door to us."

An official who answered the phone at the county government offices declined to comment on the incident.
 

W.G.Ewald

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"One of them blew their own head off, or they wouldn't have been discovered," he said.
 
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Ray

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Xinjiang attack: China sentences three to death

A Chinese court has sentenced three men to death over violence in Xinjiang that left 35 people dead, state media say.

The court called the violence on 26 June in Turpan's remote township of Lukqun, about 200km (120 miles) south-east of the region's capital, Urumqi, a "terrorist attack".

A mob armed with knives attacked police stations, leading police to open fire, state media said at the time.

A fourth man was jailed for 25 years for his involvement, reports said.

There are sporadic outbreaks of violence in Xinjiang, where there are ethnic tensions between Muslim Uighur and Han Chinese communities.

The court in China's western Xinjiang region gave Ahmatniyaz Sidiq, Urayim Eli and Abdulla Esrapil the death penalty, describing Ahmatniyaz Sidiq as the leader, state-run news agency Xinhua said.

The men "spread religious extremism" and "watched violence-inciting videos from foreign terrorist organisations", Xinhua said, citing the court.

Map
State media reports at the time said 24 people were killed and 11 attackers.

Confirming reports from the region is difficult because information is tightly controlled. A BBC reporter who tried to visit Lukqun at the time was turned away at a police checkpoint.

Uighurs make up about 45% of Xinjiang's population, but say an influx of Han Chinese residents has marginalised their traditional culture.

Beijing authorities often blame violent incidents in Xinjiang on Uighur extremists seeking autonomy for the region. Uighur activists, meanwhile, accuse Beijing of over-exaggerating the threat to justify heavy-handed rule.

In 2009 almost 200 people - mostly Han Chinese - were killed after deadly rioting erupted in Urumqi between the Han Chinese and Uighur communities.

BBC News - Xinjiang attack: China sentences three to death
 

Ray

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Xinjaing burns, but it is off limit to the international media!
 

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