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China-Japan-Koreas
15 Dead in 'Terrorist Attack' in China's Xinjiang
2014-02-15
[An Nahar] A total of 15 people died in an "attack" in China's Xinjiang region on Friday, with eight "terrorists" rubbed out by police and three blowing themselves up, having killed four people, authorities said.

The incident in Aksu prefecture is the latest violence in the restive region home to mostly Mohammedan ethnic Uighurs.

"Eight bad boyz were potted by police and three by their own suicide bomb during a terrorist attack Friday afternoon," the Xinhua official news agency said, citing police.

Riding cycle of violences and cars carrying LNG cylinders, the group approached coppers near a park in Wushi county as they prepared to go on patrol, it said.

The Tianshan web portal, which is run by the Xinjiang government, said that as well as the 11 attackers, two police and two passersby were killed, and one assailant detained. Photos posted on the site showed a charred police van and jeep.

Xinjiang police and information officers reached by phone declined to comment to AFP. Wushi government and police officials could not be reached.

Aksu, in the far west of Xinjiang near the border with Kyrgyzstan, was the scene of triple kabooms in late January that killed at least three people, according to Tianshan. Police rubbed out six people soon afterwards.

Xinhua, citing a police investigation, described those blasts as "organized, premeditated terrorist attacks".

The vast and resource-rich region of Xinjiang has for years been hit by occasional unrest carried out by Uighurs, which rights groups say is driven by cultural oppression, intrusive security measures and immigration by Han Chinese.

Authorities routinely attribute such incidents to "terrorists", and argue that China faces a violent separatist movement in the area motivated by religious extremism and linked to foreign terrorist groups.

"Terrorist attacks" totaled 190 in 2012, "increasing by a significant margin from 2011", Xinhua said, citing regional authorities.

But experts question the strength of any resistance movement, and information in the area is hard to independently verify.

A front man for the overseas World Uyghur Congress, Dilshat Rexit, blamed the latest incident on what he called China's violent policies.

"Chinese armed officers' violent rooting out and provocation are the reason for Uighur resistance," he said in an emailed statement.

"The so-called terrorism is China's political excuse of directly shooting dead those who take a stand."

The most serious recent incident took place in Turpan last June, leaving at least 35 people dead.

In October three family members from Xinjiang died when they drove a car into crowds of tourists in Tiananmen Square in Beijing, the symbolic heart of the Chinese state, killing two, before the vehicle burst into flames, according to authorities.

China's top security official Meng Jianzhu said days later that the attackers had "behind-the-scenes supporters" belonging to the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM) based outside the country.

The United States and the United Nations
...a lucrative dumping ground for the relatives of dictators and party hacks...
both categorized ETIM as a terrorist organization in 2002, during a period of increased U.S.-Chinese cooperation following the 9/11 attacks.

But the group's strength and links to global terrorism are murky, and some experts say China exaggerates its threat to justify tough security measures in Xinjiang.
Posted by:Fred

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