At Least 15 Uyghurs Killed in Police Shootout in Xinjiang
AUGUST 25, 2013— Chinese authorities have shot dead at least 15 ethnic Uyghurs in a
desert area in Xinjiang, accusing them of terrorism and illegal
religious activity, in the latest violence to rock the troubled
northwestern region of China, according to police sources.
They
were among a group of more than 20 Uyghurs surrounded and fired upon by
police in a lightning raid last week in the Yilkiqi township in Kargilik (in Chinese,
Yecheng) county in Kashgar prefecture, the sources said.
"We
conducted an anti-terror operation on August 20th, successfully and
completely destroying the terrorists," Yilkiqi township police chief
Batur Osman told RFA's Uyghur Service.
He refused to give the
number of Uyghurs killed in the shootout, saying many of them were from
out of town and some were not carrying identification documents.
Chinese
authorities usually blame outbreaks of violence in Xinjiang on
"terrorists" among the region's ethnic minority Muslim Uyghurs but
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.
One of the police
assistants at the Yilkiqi police station told RFA that among those
killed were at least 15 Uyghurs and one Han Chinese policeman.
"We
police assistants were not sent to the scene but I heard from others
who were there that 16 people had been killed, among them a Han Chinese
policeman," said the police assistant, identifying himself only as
Alimjan.
He said that six knives and axes had been recovered from the scene.
Buried on the spot
An
RFA listener, citing contacts in Yilkiqi, his hometown, said he was
told that police opened fire at a group of 28 Uyghurs they believed were
undergoing terrorism training and those killed at the scene were buried
on the spot using escavators.
A Yilkiqi resident said that
police on Saturday searched the house of his neighbor whose brother was
implicated in the incident and that he overheard that 26 Uyghurs had
been killed.
The figure could not be independently confirmed.
"From
what I heard, those killed were the ones who were renting [my
neighbour] Memet Emey's brother's house in Seriq Ata village," the
Yilkiqi resident said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
"When
they gathered in the desert and were praying together, they were
surrounded and fired at. There were 26 people there and all of them were
killed. The police, instead of carrying the bodies to the village,
buried them all in the desert using a bulldozer," he said.
Yilkiqi
local government officials said security has been beefed up to prevent
what they call retaliatory attacks from Uyghurs angered by the shooting.
"Since
what happened on August 20th, we have been standing on guard at the
government buildings," Ablet Abdulla, a government official told RFA.
Akber
Imin, another official involved in the additional security measures,
said those shot dead were believed to be involved in illegal religious
activities and bomb-making in a bid to launch a "terrorist attack."
"The
police found out and dealt with the situation immediately," he said.
"Right now, our police are being deployed to search and capture the
other members of the group who were not at the scene."
Increasing violence
The
Yikkiqi incident follows a spate of violence across Xinjiang in recent
months that has led to a crackdown with hundreds of Uyghurs detained for
questioning by the authorities.
Nearly two weeks ago, a Uyghur
religious leader was stabbed to death after returning home from leading
evening prayers at a mosque in Turpan city in Turpan prefecture. He was
targeted by members of his own community for branding Uyghurs as
"terrorists" and backing a government crackdown against them, residents
and officials said.
In early August, police opened fire at a
crowd of Uyghurs protesting prayer restrictions in Akyol town in Aksu
prefecture ahead of the festival marking the end of Islam's holy month
of Ramadan, killing at least three and injuring about 50 others.
In
June, up to 46 people were killed in Lukchun township of Pichan county
in Turpan prefecture after police opened fire at "knife-wielding mobs"
who had attacked police stations and other sites in the county, in the
bloodiest violence since the July 5, 2009 unrest in Xinjiang's regional
capital Urumqi that triggered a massive crackdown.
Also in June,
in Hotan prefecture's Hanerik township, police fired at hundreds of
Uyghurs protesting the arrest of a young religious leader and closure of
a mosque, officials said, acknowledging that up to 15 people may have
been killed and 50 others injured.
Uyghurs in Xinjiang say they
have long suffered ethnic discrimination, oppressive religious controls,
and continued poverty and joblessness, blaming their hardships partly
on a massive influx of Han Chinese into the region.
Reported
by Shohret Hoshur for RFA's Uyghur Service. Trranslated by Mamatjan
Juma. Written in English by Parameswaran Ponnudurai.
View this story online at: http://www.rfa.org/english/news/uyghur/shootout-08252013134303.html
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