Dec 02, 2014

East Turkestan: 15 Killed and 14 Injured as Activists Claim Chinese Government Uses Excessive Force


Following a recent increase in violence in the East Turkestan region, an attack resulted in the death of 15 people with a further 14 people being injured. While the Chinese Government blames the attack on ’terrorists’ and claims that 11 of the 15 people killed were assailants, Uyghur activists assert that the Chinese police has used indiscriminate deadly force when dealing with people protesting the Government’s actions in the region.

 

Below is an article published by The Korea Herald:

 

An attack in China’s troubled western Xinjiang [East Turkestan] region left 15 people dead and 14 injured, state media reported Saturday, the latest in a wave of ethnic violence there that has claimed dozens of lives over the past year.

The official Xinhua news agency reported that the attack took place at a “food street” Friday, 28 November 2014, in Shache county, the same region where state media said a series of attacks in July 2014 left 96 people dead, including 59 assailants.

The Tianshan news portal said the assailants in Friday’s attack wielded explosives, knives and at least one vehicle. Xinhua reported that 11 of the 15 people killed were assailants.

Police in Shache county declined to provide information about the incident.

Xinjiang has seen repeated violence over the past year as members of the Muslim Uyghur minority group have bristled under what they say is repressive Chinese government rule.

The central government regularly blocks attempts to independently confirm state media reports of ethnic violence in Xinjiang. Uyghur groups say police have used indiscriminate deadly force against people protesting the government’s policies in the region.

The U.S.-based Uyghur American Association disputed government accounts of the July 2014 attacks that described mobs rampaging through towns with knives and axes targeting majority Han Chinese. The association said police instead opened fire on people protesting against a security crackdown on Muslims during Ramadan, killing more than 20.

In October 2014, a Xinjiang court sentenced 12 people to death for the July attacks and handed down death sentences with two-year reprieves to another 15 people.

Chinese authorities say their security crackdown in Xinjiang has busted 115 terrorist gangs before they could unleash violence, but tallies of death tolls in the ethnically tense region suggest the violence has continued, and may even have intensified.

Chinese state media outlets have reported at least 175 deaths since May 2014 in eight violent incidents in Xinjiang.