Chinese police kill ‘religious extremist’ near Vietnam border
PUBLISHED : Wednesday, 24 December, 2014, 4:08pm
UPDATED : Wednesday, 24 December, 2014, 4:08pm
Associated Press in Beijing
A picture on the website of the local government in Chongzuo, Guangxi shows local officials visiting an injured policeman in hospital. Photo: SCMP Pictures
Chinese police in the southwestern region of Guangxi stopped a group of “religious extremists” from illegally crossing into neighbouring Vietnam after shooting one person dead and detaining 21 others, local authorities said.
The statement Tuesday on the official website for the city of Chongzuo did not identify the religion, but Chinese authorities usually blame religious extremism for violence involving members of the Muslim ethnic minority of Uygurs in the country’s far west region of Xinjiang.
Beijing also warns that religious extremists have been seeking to leave China to train with militant groups.
The Chongzuo government said police received a tip that the group was to enter Vietnam through the border town of Pingxiang and that they ambushed the group’s two vehicles on Sunday night.
As police handcuffed members of the group, one member suddenly jumped out of bushes and stabbed at a policeman with a knife, the statement said.
Two officers immediately shot and killed that person, the statement said, and police reinforcements helped detain the 21 others.
The injured policeman was recovering at a local hospital, the statement said.
In the past 20 months, about 400 people have been killed in violence in and outside Xinjiang, according to state media reports, and China is in the middle of a one-year clampdown on what it says are terrorist activities in the region.
Beijing has blamed the violence on Islamic militants with foreign connections and seeking an independent state in Xinjiang. The government says some of them are fleeing the country to join the Jihad, although critics say the Uygurs are discriminated and economically marginalised on their homeland and that they are seeking to escape from the repressive rule by the Chinese government.