Slain Uyghurs Not Linked to Bomb-Making Activities
March 13, 2012— Four Uyghur men shot dead by police in China’s troubled Xinjiang region
last week were not linked to bomb-making activities as suspected but may have had “terror
plans,” security officials said Tuesday, as residents disputed any terrorism intentions.
The men were gunned down in a pre-dawn raid at a farmhouse near Korla city in central
Xinjiang on Thursday, as part of the Chinese government's "strike hard"
anti-crime campaign in the region, after police had detained a bomb-making suspect in the
city.
Korla police said that there was evidence that the men, who defended themselves with
knives during the raid, had plans for terrorist activity though they did not elaborate.
Beijing considers Xinjiang a terrorism hotspot and the incident added to tensions in the
region, where Uyghurs complain of policies favoring Han Chinese migration into the region
and the unfair allocation of resources to the Chinese.
Local residents who knew the Uyghurs involved disputed the police theory that those killed
were suspected terrorists, claiming that the Chinese authorities had fabricated evidence
in the past to justify the killings of Uyghurs.
A security official said that Tohti Ibrahim, who was detained after a bomb exploded at his
home in Korla city, was – unlike previous suspicions – not working with the four killed in
Towurchi, a rural township 20 km (12 miles) outside the city.
Korla police had identified the Towurchi farmhouse as a target for the raid after
detaining and interrogating 20 of Ibrahim’s hospital visitors.
“Yes, it was wrong to make the conjecture [that they were linked], but the shooting was
not wrong, because the four disobeyed police during the raid operation,” said Seypidin, a
senior security official in Korla.
Moreover, the four killed had shown evidence of extremism, he said, defending the police
action.
“Even though they don't have organizational link with the bomb-maker, their ideology
and political views are 100 percent the same. And in addition, we found enough evidence of
a terror plan, like axes and boxing gloves,” he said.
Not terrorists
But a Towurchi resident who knew the four men disagreed with the police view that the men
had any terrorist intentions, explaining that the items police had confiscated as evidence
were not uncommon.
“I don't believe they had materials and items for a terror plan. Probably the boxing
gloves and bows and arrows were for sports for them and their children. Axes and knives
can be found in all the houses in Korla,” he said.
“Police, especially state security police, always fabricate evidence to justify their
killing,” he added.
Three of the four men were from out of town and had served time in jail for unknown
offenses, according to the Towurchi resident and Korla police.
Ghulamidin Yasin, the police officer who led the raid on the Towurchi farmhouse, said one
of the four men was from Akto (Aketao) county in Kizilsu prefecture, and two others were
from Peyziwat (Gashi) and Kargilik (Yecheng) counties in Kashgar prefecture. It was not
known where the fourth person was from.
They had moved to the township to start a terrorist camp, the officer claimed.
The resident said they had come to work on the farm in Towurchi two years ago after being
harassed by police in their hometowns.
“They had left their hometowns to be rid of police trouble because of their police
records. They moved to Korla just to seek a peaceful life,” he said.
“Of course they had to evade the police raid because they knew what would happen to them
if they were detained. And on the other hand, as strong religious believers, they don’t
submit easily to unjust treatment,” he said.
Bomb suspect
Tohti Ibrahim, the bomb-making suspect originally linked to the men killed, may have been
motivated to make a bomb in revenge against his wife’s detention, according to his
neighbors and Korla police.
"Tohti Ibrahim’s case is much different from the others’. His actions were mostly
motivated by personal or family anger, rather than ethnic tension,” a neighbor said.
Ibrahim’s wife had been detained by city police, along with his brother Memet Ibrahim’s
wife, for holding an “illegal religious gathering” with a dozen other women on Feb. 28,
neighbors and police said.
The raid on the gathering, in which police confiscated books and CDs, was part of a
regional campaign against illegal religious activity, Ghulamidin Yasin said.
After his wife was detained, Ibrahim told his neighbors, “Now I’m in a situation where I
cannot protect my wife. This is enough reason for me to be thrown into hell in the other
world,” they said.
Reported by Shohret Hoshur for RFA’s Uyghur service. Translated by Shohret Hoshur. Written
in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.
View this story online at:
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/uyghur/korla-03132012182221.html
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