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August 05, 2008
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Tuesday
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Sha'aban 2, 1429
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16 Chinese police killed in Kashgar terror attack
URUMQI (China)), Aug 4: At least 16 policemen in China’s Muslim-majority northwest were killed on Monday in a suspected terrorist attack, state media said, raising security fears four days before the Beijing Olympics.
In one of the deadliest reported assaults in China in years, a lorry was aimed at 70 police officers jogging near their barracks in Kashgar, a city in Xinjiang region close to Central Asia, the Xinhua news agency said.
After the lorry hit a roadside pole, one of the two attackers got out and threw home-made explosives at the exercising police officers, the agency reported.
It said 14 police were killed on the spot and two died from their wounds on the way to hospital, while 16 others were injured.
The two attackers, aged 28 and 33, were arrested immediately, according to the news agency, which identified the men as members of the Muslim ethnic Uighur group.
“We were awakened... by two very loud bangs,” said Siegfried Maurer, a German who was staying with his family at the Barony Hotel close to the attack in the northwest of the city.
Police in Kashgar, which is close to the Tajikistan border and around 4,000km from Beijing, immediately imposed a lockdown in the surrounding areas, Maurer said.
“There were about 20 police on our floor alone. They came into our rooms and checked our cameras to see if we had taken any pictures of the incident,” he said, adding he was not allowed to leave for four hours.The incident threw a shadow over the Olympic countdown, after government warnings that members of Xinjiang’s Uighurs, a Turkic-speaking people, were planning to wreck the Games.
Dilxat Raxit, a Sweden-based spokesman for the World Uighur Congress, said anger was rising among the Uighurs about a pre-Olympic crackdown involving numerous arrests, but he could not confirm if Uighurs carried out the attack.
“The police and soldiers just arrest them without any rules,” he said.Beijing Olympic organisers said it did not know yet if there was a direct connection to the showpiece sporting event, which begins on Friday.
But China has said repeatedly that a major terrorist threat emanates from Xinjiang and that they were planning to stage attacks on the Games.
They say the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, a UN-listed terrorist group, is the main concern there.
Xinjiang has about 8.3 million Uighurs, and many are unhappy with what they say has been decades of repressive Communist Chinese rule. Some in Xinjiang still cling to hopes of independence and establishing “East Turkestan”.
Two short-lived East Turkestan republics emerged in Xinjiang in the 1930s and 1940s, at a time when central government control in China was weakened by civil war and Japanese invasion.
In line with the flow of information in China surrounding security issues, reports were released only through official channels, while local authorities denied any knowledge of the event.
“Everything has returned to normal,” an official with the Kashgar People’s Armed Police said by telephone. He declined any other comment.—AFP
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