• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Security tightened after three killed in bomb, knife attack at Urumqi train station

Deuce

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset

Security tightened after three killed in bomb, knife attack at Urumqi train station


President Xi Jinping vows to 'crush terrorists'


PUBLISHED : Thursday, 01 May, 2014, 5:47pm
UPDATED : Thursday, 01 May, 2014, 6:55pm

Li Jing and Adrian Wan

1_0.jpg


Armed police at the scene of the explosion in Urumqi. Photo: Simon Song

Security was tightened at South Urumqi train station one day after the blast that killed three people and injured 79 others in a suspected terror attack, with an increased armed police presence.

Dozens of armoured vehicles were stationed on Thursday afternoon at entrances to the largest railway station in Urumqi, capital of Xinjiang, with hundreds of gun- or shield-wielding uniformed officers patrolling the railway complex.

The station exit, where the blast took place, was cordoned off on Thursday, leaving many onlookers, both Han and Uygur, standing by solemnly and quietly exchanging words about the attack.

“Some people were chopping others with their knives, and then came the sound of the explosion, which was deafening,” said a shop worker at a mobile phone accessories shop.

urumqi-0501-net1.jpg


Armed police at the scene of the explosion in Urumqi. Photo: SCMP

“I ran away without thinking, but I saw several men lying on the ground, heavily injured.” she said. She added that she did not clearly see how many assailants there were, or how they were dressed.

“We were waiting outside the station for a train to Yili, and then the bomb exploded. Many pieces of luggage were scattered around. I then saw a man whose leg was seriously hurt, limping out of the station," a traveller from Wuxi said. He added that his train on Wednesday night had been cancelled following the attack, and he had come to Urumqi station again on Thursday in hopes of getting a train out of the city.

“All I heard was the explosion and screams, and all I saw were several people hurt. And then I ran away as fast as I could,” a grocer said.

2.jpg


Locals walk past as armed security stand guard at the site of the explosion in Urumqi. Photo: Simon Song

“I heard the loud blast and ran for my life. People in other shops did the same. We were then asked not to open for the rest of the day,” a fruit seller said, adding that some shop workers had been asked by government officials not to speak out about their accounts of the incident.

President Xi Jinping ordered Xinjiang authorities to take "resolute measures" and crush "violent terrorists" after the attack in the restive Western region.

urumqihos.jpg


A view of the Autonomous Region Chinese Medical Hospital where many explosion wounded people stay. Photo: Simon Song

Xinhua quoted local police as saying that knife-wielding assailants attacked people and set off explosives shortly after 7pm on Wednesday at the exit of the Urumqi South railway station. Four of the injured were in critical condition, Xinhua said.

Two of those killed were suspected assailants who detonated explosive devices they were carrying, and the third was an innocent bystander, the official People's Daily said on Thursday.

Watch: Several killed and dozens injured in Urumqi railway station attack

<iframe class="knuhyzcactvzkbmlamas" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/5VisCgdCn_I?rel=0" allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="315" width="560"></iframe>

Xi ordered Xinjiang officials to do everything in their power to help those injured in the attack, resolve the case quickly and mete out harsh punishment against the assailants, Xi said.

More than 100 Uygurs were arrested after the attack, said a Uygur separatist group based in Germany. The Post has not been able to independently verify the alleged arrests.

7.jpg


A man cleans up shards of glass from a window that shattered in the explosion. Photo: Simon Song

"The explosion in Urumqi proves that suppression is not a solution to the problem,” Dilxadi Rexiti, a spokesman for the World Uygur Congress, said in a written statement.

“The Uygurs, who are struggling between despair and survival, hope Xi Jinping would give constructive suggestions to improve the chaotic situations with his visit to East Turkestan, but this has not happened,” Rexiti said, using the name preferred by Uygur separatists for the region of Xinjiang.

The attack occurred just as Xi wrapped up his four-day inspection tour of Xinjiang.

Xi had vowed to deploy a “strike first” strategy against terrorism to “deter enemies and inspire the people” during the tour, Xinhua reported.

8.jpg


A security patrol at the railway station in Urumqi. Photo: Simon Song

At a mosque in Urumqi on Wednesday morning, just two kilometres from the train station, Xi called on religious leaders to help followers to better understand religious teachings so people could live in peace.

State television reported Xi was in Urumqi yesterday morning, meeting workers ahead of Labour Day today as well as local religious leaders.

Police cordoned off all entrances to the station square and armed police were deployed, Xinhua added. Xinjiang government spokesman Luo Fuyong said the situation was “well under control” after the blast, according to Reuters.

4_0.jpg


A boy walks past the area in Urumqi. Photo: Simon Song

Hong Kong Travel Industry Council executive director Joseph Tung Yao-chung said he was not aware of any Hong Kong tour groups in Urumqi.

A resident working at a nearby hostel told the South China Morning Post over the phone: “The blast was quite powerful and there were possibly deaths.”

But another witness told the Post that "the bomb seemed home made, as the blast was not massive. Nobody had their limbs blown off."

For years, resource rich and strategically located Xinjiang has been beset by violence that Beijing blames on Islamist militants and separatists.

6.jpg


The city has reportedly remained quiet after the explosion. Photo: Simon Song

Li Wei, a Beijing-based counter-terrorism expert, said the blast showed that there were still weak links in security precautions.

“Security checks at the exit of a railway station are more relaxed than at the entrance,” he said.

Li said the terrorist attacks would not disappear soon even though the top leadership had highlighted the importance of tightening security.

Additional reporting by Adrian Wan and Eddie Lee

 

Deuce

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Re: Security tightened after three killed in bomb, knife attack at Urumqi train stati


Breaking news alerts on Urumqi attack ‘censored’ on Weibo

PUBLISHED : Thursday, 01 May, 2014, 3:52pm
UPDATED : Thursday, 01 May, 2014, 6:03pm

Andrea Chen [email protected]

policexj.jpg


Armed police officers standing guard at the Urumqi South railway station. Photo: Reuters

As China reels from the latest deadly terror attack in the restive western region of Xinjiang, many have complained that that breaking news alerts of the bomb-and-knife attack outside a railway station in Urumqi were censored on the mainland’s most popular social media platform on Wednesday night.

Beijing has condemned the attack as an act of terrorism and pointed a finger at Xinjiang separatist forces, hours after the attack at around 7pm on Wednesday evening killed three people and injured 79.

Two of those killed were suspected assailants who detonated explosive devices they were carrying, and the third victim was an innocent bystander, the official People's Daily said on Thursday.

An English-language account operated by the official Xinhua news agency, “Xinhua - I report”, was the first to post a news alert on Weibo, formerly known as Sina Weibo until a recent name change, within an hour of the explosion rocking the largest railway station in the capital of Xinjiang.

“A blast hits a railway station in Urumqi, capital of northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region,” the post read.

twitter-urumqi.net_.jpg


Composite photo showing Xinhua news feed before (left) and after apparent censoring

The news came hot on the heels of state television broadcast reports on President Xi Jinping’s four-day tour in the troubled province during its evening news bulletin.

Major mainland media outlets including Weibo’s official news account “Breaking News”, which has over 33 million followers, quickly reposted the brief alert from Xinhua, which is commonly taken as the official tone of the Chinese authority.

Within half an hour, the state news agency updated its Weibo account with a post about Xi’s speech on terrorism, in which he wrapped up his tour of Urumqi by saying Beijing vowed to deploy a “strike-first” strategy against terrorism.

Meanwhile, People’s Daily also followed up with a post saying “The injured have been sent to hospital”.

“Stay tuned for our follow-up report,” the state newspaper told its 19.5 million followers.

In an unusual turn of events, the post was soon conspicuously absent from Sina Weibo. So were the initial report by Xinhua English and all news outlets’ reposts of the alert.

Pictures showing blood on suitcases and debris on the ground were also purged, according to Freeweibo, a website that archives censored posts.

Shocked and confused, microbloggers bombarded the official news account of Sina Weibo with questions over why a major news event would be censored on the mainland’s most popular social media platform.

“You crazy, Sina?” a microblogger from Shenzhen who called himself “forever 25 degree” wrote in a comment on the latest post of Weibo’s official news account.

He added that search results for “4.30 Xinjiang railway station blast” were not available on Weibo, with the reason given online as “in accordance with law and regulation”.

Some users complained Weibo had censored their posts about the blast.

“I just want to say that we have every right to know the truth,” a microblogger from Xinjiang who called herself “Xiao Xin” wrote in her comments.

Others started wondering if the initial reports were untruthful.

“Was it a false alert? Or was it too sensitive to be posted on Sina Weibo?” a microblogger from Shanghai posted.

Despite being one of the more active news outlets on Sina Weibo, the “Breaking News” account maintained silence for a further two hours, without posting any updates on the blast or other news events, until China Central Television and Xinhua finished drafting an official news brief on the explosion at around 11.30pm on Wednesday night.

“Shortly after a train arrived from Chengdu, a blast happened at an exit of the railway station. People injured in the blast have been sent to hospital, and the station has resumed normal operations. The cause of the blast is still under investigation,” the updated post, labelled “news alert,” said.

“Is it an ‘alert’? Shame on you [CCTV],” Chen Zhaohui, chairman of Baijia Food, one of the mainland’s largest manufacturers of instant noodles, wrote in a comment on the post.

“The right to be informed shows the authority’s basic trust in its citizens, especially in the face of emergencies,” Wang Ran, an investment banker based in Beijing wrote in his comment. “If you [the authority] don’t trust the public, why on earth should they trust you?”

Sina News declined to comment.

 
Top