Five Police Officers Killed in Attack on Xinjiang Security Checkpoint
JUNE 22, 2014 -- Five police officers have been killed in a pre-dawn attack on a security
checkpoint in China's restive far-western region of Xinjiang after government
officials harassed ethnic minority Muslim women wearing head scarves and men with beards,
according to police and residents.
Unknown assailants on Friday stabbed two police officers guarding the checkpoint in
Qaraqash (in Chinese, Moyu) county in southwestern Hotan prefecture and then set fire to a
room in the building where three police officers were taking a nap, police said.
Residents going for early Friday morning Muslim prayers discovered the two wounded
officers and the charred remains of the three others in the room and alerted the
authorities. The two officers died on the way to the hospital.
The incident followed several high-profile attacks blamed on militants in Xinjiang, the
traditional home of the Uyghurs who complain they have long suffered ethnic
discrimination, oppressive religious controls, and continued poverty and joblessness.
Local police described the violence in Kayash village in Manglay township as among the
most deadly in the area in recent years.
“It was the most terrible incident in our town but I cannot give you details about
that," Ablikim Yasin, chief of the Manglay police station, told RFA's Uyghur
Service. "You should call the higher authorities for that.”
Manglay town chairman Shi Hongchang said the assailants struck at 4 a.m.
"The three police officers were sleeping inside, the two others were on watch
outside. The group first stabbed the two who were guarding outside and then set fire to
the room,” he told RFA.
Kayash village residents said the checkpoint was razed to the ground.
Lookout for suspects
Atawulla Qasim, chief of Kayash village, said the local authorities were helping police to
look for the suspects who carried out the attack.
"There are still no clues about the identity of the suspects," he told RFA,
saying police have found five empty bottles of petrol.
"The group locked the door of the room from outside after they stabbed the two
officers, poured the petrol into the room through a stove chimney and then set fire to
it," Qasim said.
"The officers were unable to get out," he said.
A resident living near the checkpoint said the violence occurred amid tensions in Manglay
town, where police had detained and interrogated women wearing head scarves and men with
beards two days before the incident.
"Just two days ago, this place was so busy," the resident said, speaking on
condition of anonymity. "The [police] were stopping, holding or interrogating women
who were wearing headscarves or men with beards."
Many Uyghurs say headscarves are a marker of Uyghur rather than Muslim identity. Chinese
authorities, however, discourage the wearing of beards and headscarves, veils, and other
Islamic dress in the region.
Heavy-handedness
A Qaraqash schoolteacher said he was not surprised by the fresh violence in the county,
citing what he called the heavy-handedness of Beijing's “strike hard” campaign
launched throughout Xinjiang in the wake of increasing violence.
"I was not surprised when I heard about this incident," the teacher said, also
speaking on condition of anonymity. "The ongoing 'strike hard' campaign, let
alone other campaigns in previous years, is enough to provoke more serious incidents which
we are seeing now."
"They do not do anything for stability other than just spreading hostility and hatred
among society."
The Qaraqash violence came a day before police shot dead 13 people in Kargilik county in
Xinjiang's Kashgar prefecture on Saturday after they drove into a police building and
set off an explosion, according to reports.
The official Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region government website Tianshan said the 13
"thugs" crashed a car into the public security building in the county and
detonated explosives.
Three police officers suffered injuries but there were no other casualties, the report
said, without providing further details, according to Agence France-Presse.
Chinese state media reported earlier in the week that 13 people had been executed in the
region for "terrorist attacks” in seven separate cases.
Xinjiang authorities declared a one-year crackdown on “violent terrorist activities” last
month following the May 22 bombing at a market in Xinjiang’s capital Urumqi that killed 43
people, including the four attackers.
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/violence-06222014163028.html
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