22008-07-10 RFA
Chinese police stage a dramatic raid on a flat
occupied by ethnic Uyghurs in the restive Xinjiang
region.

Graphic:
RFA
Police in the Xinjiang capital, Urumqi,
shot dead five ethnic Uyghurs in a raid July 8.
HONG KONG—Chinese police used smoke to force open
a flat in the restive northwestern region of
Xinjiang before shooting dead five ethnic Uyghurs
inside who the official media said were planning a
“holy war,” a witness to the incident has said.
“They threw a smoke bomb at the apartment. Then
police got into the apartment and during this time
one of the police was hurt by the one of the Uyghurs,”
a neighbor and witness said.
“After this first injury, the police began to fire
their guns. Five of the Uyghurs ended up dead. Women
were also occupying the apartment at this time. All
of these Uyghurs were young men and women,” the man,
who asked to be identified only as Duan, said.
“They were only equipped with knives,” he said of
the Uyghurs. “Now the situation is pretty peaceful
in our neighborhood and normal. The police told us
that they were terrorists.”
Now the situation is pretty peaceful in our
neighborhood and normal. The police told us that
they were terrorists."
Neighbor
On Tuesday, July 8, police in the Xinjiang capital,
Urumqi, raided an apartment where 15 Uyghurs—a
distinct Muslim minority—were hiding, the official
Xinhua news agency said. It said they had rushed out
wielding knives and shouting “sacrifice for Allah.”
Police opened fire, killing five and injuring two,
Xinhua said. The incident comes just weeks before
the opening of the Beijing Olympics under extremely
tight security.
“The injured were sent to hospital and the other
nine people were captured,” it quoted a police
officer as saying. “The suspects confessed they had
all received training on the launching of a ‘holy
war.’ Their aim was to kill Han people, the most
populous ethnic group in China whom they took as
heretics, and found their own state,” it said.
‘Terrorist actions’
A Uyghur police officer, contacted by telephone,
said only that the raid was “related to terrorist
actions.” He said he didn’t know where the nine
Uyghurs who were arrested or the two who were
wounded were being held.
Another neighbor who asked to be identified as Li
confirmed the five shooting deaths but downplayed
its significance. “It was an ordinary robbery case.
Let’s not exaggerate it,” he said, adding that he
believed the use of deadly force was appropriate.
Another neighbor described the area as peaceful,
with Uyghurs accounting for about 30 percent of the
population of the building. “The environment is
pretty good,” he said, adding that he had never
witnessed tensions between Han Chinese and Uyghur
residents.
A police officer also reported that Xinjiang police
had recently stepped up their own security. “We have
even been afraid to take a siesta,” he said. Asked
if they were feared retaliation, he replied, “Yes.”
An officer on duty at the Xinjiang Public Security
Bureau denied any knowledge of the incident.
“I cannot talk about these things,” the officer said.
“I don’t know anything about it.” He then hung up
the phone.
Long history
Dilxat Raxit, exiled spokesman of the World Uyghur
Congress, sharply criticized the shootings.
“To shoot and kill has become a new method of
cracking down on Uyghurs in China. We call on the
United Nations to send international lawyers and
give effective legal assistance to those Uyghurs in
detention so that the truth can be known,” he said.
Uyghurs, like Tibetans, have a long history under
Beijing’s heavy-handed rule-which has at times
erupted in violence.
But exiled Uyghurs deny the existence of an
organized terrorist campaign and say previous
incidents have been fabricated or exaggerated to
secure international support for a crackdown.
In March, Chinese authorities said they had broken
up and arrested members of a group that were
threatening to sabotage the Beijing Olympics.
China has waged a campaign over the last decade
against what it says are violent separatists and
Islamic extremists who aim to establish an
independent state in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous
Region, which shares a border with Afghanistan,
Pakistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Russia,
and Mongolia.
After the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United
States, Beijing took the position that Uyghur groups
were connected with al-Qaeda and that one group, the
East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), was a “major
component of the terrorist network headed by Osama
bin Laden.” The ETIM has denied that charge.
Original reporting by RFA’s Mandarin, Cantonese, and
Uyghur services. Mandarin service director: Jennifer
Chou. Cantonese service director: Shiny Li. Uyghur
service director: Dolkun Kamberi. Written and
produced in English by Sarah Jackson-Han.
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