MAY 17, 2014 -- Chinese authorities shot dead two ethnic minority Uyghurs and captured another after accusing them of bombing a police station in fresh violence in China’s troubled northwestern Xinjiang region this week, police said.
Eyewitnesses said that one of them was gunned down even though he emerged
unarmed in an operation to nab suspects who conducted the pre-dawn raid on the
police station in Hotan prefecture's Guma (in Chinese, Pishan) county on
Tuesday.
Two police officers were injured in the attack on the police station in the
Muji township in the south-western part of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous
Region, Muji police chief Memet Niyaz said.
He accused the trio of staging the attack at 1.15 a.m., saying they fled after
lobbing two explosives into the station's premises.
They hurled the bombs from outside after they were unable to break open the
station's "sturdy" doors, he told RFA's Uyghur Service. "The
attackers threw two explosives one after another and retreated," he said.
Loud blasts
The loud blasts awakened the neighborhood, residents said, as police threw a
security blanket in the vicinity and launched a manhunt for the suspects over
the next two days.
They cornered the three suspects in Sanju village in the Muji township,
shooting two of them dead and capturing the third, Niyaz said.
Their identities were not immediately available.
One of them, who is believed to be 19 to 20 years old, was shot dead even
though he emerged unarmed during a raid on an asparagus farm set on fire to
flush out the suspect, according to a farmer who was deployed by the
authorities to help in the operation.
"Nobody wanted to [help police surround the asparagus farm] on their own
free will but we had to because we were worried we would be blamed as being a
'terrorist sympathizers'," the farmer, speaking on condition of anonymity,
told RFA.
"The boy rushed out of the burning field, but he did not have any weapon
in his hands," he said.
"They could have captured him alive. Even if they had asked us, we would
have captured him for them and his life would have been spared," said the
farmer, adding that some of the farmers had "wept all night" over the
killing.
'Refused to surrender'
Police said they did not take any chances after the suspect refused to
surrender.
"We waited for about one hour and then set the asparagus farm ablaze to
flush him out," police chief Niyaz said. "He was forced to come out.
As he came out, we shot him dead."
The other suspect who was killed had also refused to surrender, Niyaz said.
"He was holding a knife, so we shot him."
Chinese authorities have been stepping up crackdowns against Uyghurs they said
were linked to violence following a deadly bomb and knife attack at a train
station in the Xinjiang capital Urumqi on April 30 when President Xi Jinping
was wrapping up a visit to the region.
Three people were killed and 79 injured in the attack. Two of the alleged
assailants were among the dead.
Seven linked to railway attack arrested
Chinese police have arrested seven people suspected of involvement in the train
station attack, state-backed newspaper Global Times reported on Saturday.
Global Times said the seven were held in a farm in Sanji (in Chinese, Changji)
city not far from Urumqi.
They included two brothers, a cousin and wife of one of the assailants,
identified as Sedirdin Sawut, who authorities said was behind the suicide
attack at the Urumqi South railway station.
Last week, authorities in Sawut’s hometown in Aksu prefecture’s Shayar (Xayar)
county of Gulbagh in Shayar told RFA that they had rounded up more than 100 of
his relatives in their bid to identify “like-minded” people who may be planning
future terrorist strikes.
Stabbing spree
The attack outside the Urumqi train station followed a stabbing spree in March
at a railway station in the southwestern Chinese city of Kunming that state
media said was carried out by people from Xinjiang and left 29 people dead and
143 injured.
After the Urumqi blast, authorities in Xinjiang, Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou,
and other major cities began carrying out "discriminatory" detentions
and searches of Uyghurs, particularly students, a spokesman for the exile World
Uyghur Congress had said.
Uyghur rights groups accuse the Chinese authorities of heavy-handed rule in
Xinjiang, including curbs on Islamic practices and the culture and language of
the Uyghur people.
Official figures show that about 100 people, mostly Uyghurs, were believed
killed in attacks in Xinjiang over the last year.
Deadly 2009 ethnic riots between Uyghurs and Han Chinese in Urumqi left around
200 people dead and sparked a security crackdown targeting Ugyhurs.
Reported by Shohret Hoshur for RFA's Uyghur Service. Translated by
Mamatjan Juma. Written in English by Parameswaran Ponnudurai.
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