Uyghurs in China Train Station Attack May Have Acted 'in Desperation'
MARCH 3, 2014 — A group of knife-wielding attackers who went on a weekend slashing spree
at a train station in China's southern Yunnan province may have been disgruntled
ethnic minority Uyghur asylum seekers who felt "trapped" between violence in
their Xinjiang homeland and the inability to flee across the border into Laos, sources
say.
Chinese authorities have labeled the eight assailants accused of killing 29 people and
injuring 143 others in the "terror attack" at the railway station in
Yunnan's capital Kunming as separatists from the troubled Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous
Region — more than 1,500 kilometers (900 miles) from the province.
But Uyghur sources in the Yunnan capital said the eight — four of whom were shot dead and
the others captured by police — might have acted in desperation as they, according to
Chinese state media, slashed indiscriminately at people queuing to buy tickets at the busy
railway terminal on Saturday.
"I believe the attackers may have been a desperate group of Uyghurs who fled Xinjiang
to Yunnan and were trapped there after the Chinese authorities discovered their plans to
get across to Laos," a Uyghur in Kunming told RFA's Uyghur Service, speaking on
condition of anonymity.
The source said he suspects the eight had fled to Yunnan following a police crackdown in
Xinjiang's violence-hit Hanerik township in Hotan prefecture last year.
The crackdown came after police opened fire at a large crowd of unarmed Uyghurs protesting
the arrest of a young religious leader and the closure of a mosque in June, leaving at
least 15 killed and 50 others injured.
In October, sources had told RFA that Chinese authorities had rounded up some 100 Uyghurs
in Yunnan amid a hunt for seven suspects fleeing to the Lao border following the Hanerik
clashes.
At least 30 Uyghurs were apprehended at the town of Mohan on the border with Laos in
Yunnan’s Mengla county in late September, and scores of others were detained around the
province, a Uyghur merchant who witnessed the arrest had told RFA.
Some of them were held because they were trying to flee across the border into Laos
without passports.
Laos is among countries bordering China which Uyghurs fleeing violence in their homeland
hope to use as a launching pad for sanctuary in third countries.
Wanted list
The eight linked to the deadly Kunming attack — including two women — had likely been
placed on the police wanted list after the 30 Uyghurs were apprehended in Mohan, sources
in Kunming said.
“They may have tried to cross the border in their bid for political asylum but they gave
up after the 30 Uyghurs were captured on the Mohan border,” another Uyghur in Kunming
said, also speaking on condition of anonymity.
“They cannot go back to Hotan, but they cannot do any business in Kunming either because
they don’t have any ID cards with them and have arrest warrants issued against them by the
regional police department,” the source said.
With no immediate hope in sight, they may have decided to go on a killing spree to avenge
the death of their compatriots back home in Xinjiang, according to the source.
“They were likely reacting to the extra-judicial killings that have occurred about a dozen
times last year in Xinjiang," the Uyghur said. "Their message to the government
was, ‘We can do something also.'"
China has intensified a sweeping security crackdown against the mostly Muslim,
Turkic-speaking Uyghurs in recent months in Xinjiang, where according to official figures
about 100 people are believed to have been killed over the last year — many of them
Uyghurs accused by the authorities of terrorism and separatism.
'East Turkestan flags'
Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang told reporters in Beijing Monday that
"some East Turkestan flags were found on the scene" of the Kunming attack, led
by one Abdurehim Kurban.
Hong Kong broadcaster Phoenix TV showed images of a blue flag embroidered with the Islamic
declaration of faith, said to have been found by police.
Many Uyghurs refer to Xinjiang as East Turkestan, as the region had come under Chinese
control following two short-lived East Turkestan republics in the 1930s and 1940s.
They say they have long suffered ethnic discrimination and oppressive religious controls
under Beijing’s policies, blaming the problems partly on the influx of Han Chinese into
the region.
Rights groups and experts say Beijing exaggerates the terrorism threat to take the heat
off domestic policies that cause unrest or to justify the authorities' use of force
against Uyghurs.
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/desperate-03032014224353.html
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