Knife-wielding attackers kill 17 in Xinjiang

Violence takes place ahead of fourth anniversary of deadly Urumqi riots

Armed Chinese soldiers in Urumqi during deadly riots in 2009, when local Uighurs turned on Han Chinese in an incident that led to deadly reprisals by Han on Uighurs a few days later. Photograph: David Gray/Reuters
Armed Chinese soldiers in Urumqi during deadly riots in 2009, when local Uighurs turned on Han Chinese in an incident that led to deadly reprisals by Han on Uighurs a few days later. Photograph: David Gray/Reuters

Violence in a remote town in the restive Chinese region of Xinjiang killed 27 people yesterday, after police opened fire on knife-wielding assailants who attacked police stations and government buildings, state media reported.

The Xinhua news agency said 17 people were killed, including nine policemen, as rioters stabbed passersby and police and set fire to police cars, before police shot and killed 10 assailants in Lukqun, a desert township in Turpan prefecture, around 200km south of the provincial capital Urumqi.

Xinhua cited officials with the region’s Communist Party committee saying the violence began when “terrorists” were discovered in a building by officials searching for weapons.

The violence takes place just weeks ahead of the fourth anniversary of deadly riots in Urumqi, when local Uighurs turned on Han Chinese in an incident that led to deadly reprisals by Han on Uighurs a few days later.

READ MORE


Deadly riots
The riots killed nearly 200 people, mostly ethnic Han Chinese, and left more than 1,700 wounded. There is a heavy security presence in the region.

In April an incident in the western city of Kashgar left 21 people dead.

Xinjiang’s eight million Uighurs form a Turkic Muslim ethnic group sharing close linguistic and cultural links to central Asia, and quite distinct from China’s majority Han.

Uighurs account for 46 per cent of the population of Xinjiang, and feel overwhelmed by Han Chinese influence, a migration they describe as cultural imperialism driven by Beijing. Han Chinese make up 39 per cent of the population, and that figure is growing.

China re-established control in Xinjiang in 1949 after crushing the short-lived state of East Turkestan, and Beijing says Xinjiang is an inalienable part of the territory of China.

It blames separatist Uighur Muslims from the East Turkistan Islamic Movement, who it says trained in militant camps in Pakistan, for a simmering separatist campaign in the region that has occasionally boiled over into violence over the past 20 years, usually swiftly suppressed by military forces in the area.


Progress
The Chinese say they are bringing progress to a backward region and boosting it economically.

China has long claimed militants in the region are trying to introduce an extreme form of Islam, but human rights groups believe Beijing exaggerates the threat from militants to justify harsh controls.

The largest province in China, Xinjiang accounts for 16 per cent of its land area, but only 2 per cent of the population. However, it has witnessed more than its fair share of the country's prosecutions for "endangering state security", which the Dui Hua Foundation said was a possible sign of "ethnic discrimination" against Uighurs.

“The continuing repression and provocation is a reason for the conflict,” said Dilxat Raxit, a spokesman for the Munich-based World Uighur Congress, which represents Uighurs overseas, in a statement.

Clifford Coonan

Clifford Coonan

Clifford Coonan, an Irish Times contributor, spent 15 years reporting from Beijing