Thursday, May 22, 2014


Police near presumed scene of attack in Urumqi (22 May)


Attackers in China's restive Xinjiang region have crashed two cars into shoppers at a market, killing 31 people, Chinese media reports say. 

They also threw explosives during the attack in the regional capital Urumqi. More than 90 people were injured, the state-run Xinhua news agency said.
The Ministry of Public Security called it a "violent terrorist incident".
Xinjiang, which is home to the Muslim Uighur minority, has seen a spate of attacks in the past year.
Information about incidents in the region, where ethnic tensions between Uighurs and Han Chinese continue, is tightly controlled.

Police at scene of attack in Urumqi - 22 May  
Security is tight in Urumqi, where ethnic tensions between Uighurs and Han Chinese continue
 
Onlookers in Urumqi after blast in the market (22 May) Onlookers were kept at a distance as the site of the blast was cordoned off
 
Smoke in Urumqi (photo from Weibo user "Manga"), 22 May Smoke could be seen billowing over the street in Urumqi where the blast took place
 
'Smoke billowing' Pictures on Weibo microblogs - China's equivalent of Twitter - appeared to show Thursday's attack taking place at one end of a busy market street lined with vegetable stalls.
One of the two vehicles exploded.

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Eyewitness: Weibo user "Manga" (漫画)
I didn't go downstairs because I was scared. I was the only one [at home]. I was worried for my safety. I heard the first two blasts, like a thunderstorm, and I thought it was one. Then there were another three to four explosions, and then smoke billowing, and everybody downstairs was running... The ambulances arrived immediately (within 10 minutes), then came a police car. More ambulances, fire trucks and police cars arrived within 30 minutes.

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The injured were taken to several hospitals, Xinhua said.
The World Uyghur Congress said the authorities in the Chinese capital Beijing should not increase the crackdown in Xinjiang.
A spokesman told the BBC the violent incidents were a direct result of Beijing's policies in the region.
Map
A flight from Shanghai to Urumqi on Thursday was diverted and landed at Nanjing for security reasons, Xinhua reported.
Separately, new security measures have been announced for key areas of Beijing.
Xinjiang lies in China's far west, bordering Central Asia.
China says it is pouring money into the region, but some Uighurs say their traditions are being crushed.
In 2009, tensions erupted. Riots in Urumqi left some 200 people dead.

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