Police Defuse Bombs After Blast in Xinjiang's Kashgar
Prefecture
MAY 26, 2014 -- A bomb exploded in front of a police department and four other bombs were defused by authorities in China's troubled Xinjiang region a day after attackers staged a suicide raid in the capital Urumqi last week, according to police Monday.
Three of the four bombs defused on Friday in Yarkand (in Chinese, Shache)
county in Kashgar prefecture, southwest of Urumqi, were found in front of
police buildings while the fourth was located in front of a gas station near a
school, according to a police officer.
Mutellip Hemit, the deputy police chief of Gulbagh township in Yarkand county,
said the bombs were discovered after the explosion in front of the county
police department on Friday morning.
He refused to elaborate on the damage or casualties from the explosion but said
they were minimal.
Police were initially reluctant to confirm the explosion or the discovery of
the bombs when contacted by RFA following a tip off by a listener on Friday.
"Yes, we found four time-bombs in different places after a bomb exploded
in front of our county police department," Hemit told RFA's Uyghur
Service.
"The case is still under investigation and all [key] information related
to it are being kept secret because this is a sensitive period and,
furthermore, the suspects have not been captured yet," he said.
"I was not officially informed yet but I am assuming that the explosion
did not cause a large number of casualties."
Dilmurat Kenji, a police assistant in Gulbagh police station, said he was told
that a police vehicle was damaged by the explosion but refused to give other
details.
Last Thursday, five suicide bombers carried out an attack on a vegetable market
in Urumqi, leaving 39 people dead and more than 90 others injured in the worst
violence in Xinjiang in years amid tensions between ethnic minority Uyghurs and
Han Chinese, the dominant ethnic group in China.
Uyghurs in Xinjiang say they are subjected to discriminatory and often violent
checks and searches, restrictive religious and cultural policies, and a lack of
economic opportunity.
Mass police raids
According to Hemit, the bombs which were located and defused in Yarkand had
been placed 50 to 100 meters (164 to 328 feet) from the three police buildings
and the gas station in predominantly Han Chinese areas.
"All the four bombs were found and disabled within two hours as a result
of mass police raids and investigations on Friday," he said.
Residents in Yarkand county interviewed by RFA said the government should have
made public all information about the latest bomb attack so that people could
take precautionary steps.
"The blast came as a shock, especially to Han emigrants in our town,"
said a worker at the county hospital. "You can easily see that they were
all nervous. It is written all over their faces."
Seyit Tumturk, the vice-president of the exile World Uyghur Congress, said the
authorities may be causing more harm by concealing information about the blast.
"The residents have the right to know what is happening around them. It is
harmful for both the Han Chinese and Uyghur residents in the area as any
information can help them take precautionary steps," he said.
China's official news agency Xinhua and other state controlled media were quick
to report Thursday's Urumqi attack, in which most of the victims were ethnic
Han elderly shoppers.
China Central Television said Monday the elite Politburo, a decision-making
body of the ruling Chinese Communist Party, met under the chairmanship of
President Xi Jinping and discussed measures to counter "extremists"
in Xinjiang in the wake of Thursday's explosions.
Beijing has announced a one-year crackdown to hunt down and punish
"terrorists" in Xinjiang and "prevent terrorism and extremism
from spreading to other regions."
Reported by Shohret Hoshur for RFA's Uyghur Service. Translated by
Shohret Hoshur. Written in English by Parameswaran Ponnudurai.
View this story online at: http://www.rfa.org/english/news/uyghur/bombing-05262014211703.html
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