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Han PRCs Diu Back Uigurs. Death Toll to RISE!

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=452><TBODY><TR vAlign=top><TD></TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top width=452 colSpan=2>Published July 8, 2009
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</TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top width=452 colSpan=2>Death toll rises as fresh unrest erupts in Urumqi
Riots in Xinjiang have left 156 people dead and more than 800 injured

<TABLE class=storyLinks border=0 cellSpacing=4 cellPadding=1 width=136 align=right><TBODY><TR class=font10><TD width=20 align=right> </TD><TD>Email this article</TD></TR><TR class=font10><TD width=20 align=right> </TD><TD>Print article </TD></TR><TR class=font10><TD width=20 align=right> </TD><TD>Feedback</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
(URUMQI) Chinese police have arrested more than 1,400 people following rioting in the capital of Muslim Xinjiang region which left 156 people dead and more than 800 injured, state media said on Tuesday.

<TABLE class=picBoxL cellSpacing=2 width=100 align=left><TBODY><TR><TD> </TD></TR><TR class=caption><TD>Angry mob: Thousands of Han Chinese protesters armed with makeshift weapons marched through the city yesterday vowing revenge after the riots on Sunday </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>While there were some reports that the violence had spread elsewhere in the region, Xinjiang's Communist Party boss said the unrest had been quelled, although he warned 'this struggle is far from over'.
Thousands of Han Chinese protesters armed with makeshift weapons marched through China's Urumqi city yesterday vowing revenge after ethnic unrest claimed 156 lives, an AFP reporter witnessed.
The crowd, estimated by the AFP journalist to be at least 10,000-strong, converged on central Urumqi with many carrying poles, chains, machetes and bats.
Police fired tear gas repeatedly at the protesters but they refused to disperse, according to the reporter.
Police were blocking them from getting through to an area of Urumqi populated by Muslim Uighurs, who authorities have blamed for riots on Sunday that left 156 people dead and more than 1,000 injured.
'The Uighurs came to our area to smash things, now we are going to their area to beat them,' one protester, who was carrying a metal pipe, told AFP.
Xinjiang's state-run media quoted the regional Communist Party boss Wang Lequan as calling for officials to launch 'a struggle against separatism'.
Some Xinjiang newspapers also carried graphic pictures of the violence, including corpses, at least one of which showed a woman whose throat had been slashed.
A total of 1,434 people had been detained, state news agency Xinhua reported, although local residents told Reuters that police were making indiscriminate sweeps of Uighur areas.
Despite heightened security, some unrest appeared to be spreading in the volatile region, where long-standing ethnic tensions periodically erupt into bloodshed.
Chinese officials have already blamed the unrest on separatist groups abroad, who it says want to create an independent homeland for the Muslim Uighur minority.
Exiled Uighur businesswoman and activist Rebiya Kadeer, blamed by Chinese state media for being behind the violence, denied having anything to do with it.
'These accusations are completely false,' Ms Kadeer said through an interpreter in Washington, where she now lives.
In Washington, the White House said it was concerned about the deaths but it would be premature to speculate on the circumstances.
Han Chinese residents said the death toll was likely to rise. 'Chaos was seen in a number of places in Urumqi yesterday afternoon,' the official Xinhua news agency reported.
The Xinjiang region has long experienced simmering ethnic tensions, with the eight million Uighurs complaining about the influx of Han Chinese into what they regard as their homeland, as well as political and cultural repression. -- Reuters, AFP

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makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
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Only if Sporns can be as UNITED againts the Papaya traitors!
 
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makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR>July 8, 2009
CHINA UNREST
</TR><!-- headline one : start --><TR>Hans seek Uighur targets <!--10 min-->
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Policemen carry a woman who had fainted on a street in Urumqi, Xinjiang Uigur Autonomous Region July 7, 2009. -- PHOTO: REUTERS
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<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"-->URUMQI (China) - HAN Chinese armed with iron bars and machetes roamed Urumqi city on Tuesday looking to wreak revenge on Uighurs for bloody ethnic clashes two days earlier which killed 156 and wounded more than 1,000.
Outnumbered riot police used tear gas to try to disperse the thousands of angry protesters who flooded the capital of the northwestern region of Xinjiang.
In a sign of government anxiety about the unrest, the city's Communist Party boss Li Zhi took to the streets to plead with protesters to return home, and overnight 'traffic restrictions' - originally announced as a curfew - came into effect to halt the violence, in which many people were injured.
Security forces intervened to stop fighting, breaking up a battle between hundreds of rock-throwing Han and Uighurs and forcing a Han mob to leave a building they stormed in a Uighur area, a Reuters reporter said. There were no reports of deaths.
But riot police stood warily by as crowds vented their anger by throwing rocks at a mosque and smashing restaurants and shops owned by Uighurs, a Turkic people who are largely Muslim and share linguistic and cultural bonds with Central Asia.
'They attacked us. Now it's our turn to attack them,' a Han man in the crowd told reporters. He refused to give his name.
The crowd were carrying an improvised arsenal of meat cleavers, metal rods and spades seized from building sites, rocks and wooden clubs, and the most extreme shouted 'kill them' and 'exterminate the Uighurs.'
Rioters said they wanted revenge for violence on Sunday. Beijing has not given a breakdown of the ethnicity of the dead, but official media reports initially focused on Han victims and Urumqi's Han community seem sure they were the main targets in the country's worst unrest for years.
'We're here to demand security for ourselves,' said another protester who would not give his name.
By evening the club-wielding mobs had melted away. As curfew came down police moved through emptying streets telling people to go home and handing out leaflets with a speech by a top regional official, Wang Lequan, calling for peace. Xinjiang has long been a hotbed of ethnic tensions, fostered by a yawning economic gap between Uighurs and Han Chinese, government controls on religion and culture and an influx of Han Chinese migrants who are now in the majority in most key cities. -- REUTERS
 

downgrader

Alfrescian
Loyal
mak sir, you need some soothing music in your life

there is too much violence in this world

many of these rioters are young men who are easily manipulated by people in the background to pursue their own aims

they are ignorant and are taken advantage of ..whether they han chinese or uighur

we should be more enlightened and not resort to violence to solve our problems

life is hard i know that. but we should not create enemies.

may peace be with you
 

halsey02

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
mak sir, you need some soothing music in your life

there is too much violence in this world

many of these rioters are young men who are easily manipulated by people in the background to pursue their own aims

they are ignorant and are taken advantage of ..whether they han chinese or uighur

we should be more enlightened and not resort to violence to solve our problems

life is hard i know that. but we should not create enemies.

may peace be with you

The people of middle kingdom, after so many centuries, still can never live their 'gui'....yang gui, hong mao gui, uigurs gui, re ben gui, in du gui....

"CHUNG GUO REN"....people of the middle kingdom....violence never slept.....bigotory never end...:mad:
 

littlefish

Alfrescian
Loyal
we should be more enlightened and not resort to violence to solve our problems

life is hard i know that. but we should not create enemies.

may peace be with you

Yes, we are enlightened but I am not so sure whether our neighbours are as enlightened. Hope for the best but plan for the worst would be my advice.
 
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