Chinese state media say 37 civilians were killed by a gang
in Xinjiang, with 59 attackers killed by security forces. The incident happened
on 28 July but this is the first definitive death toll released by Xinhua news
agency.
Xinhua says 215 attackers armed with knives and axes were
arrested after they stormed a police station and government offices.
But an Uighur rights group says police opened fire on people
protesting against a Ramadan crackdown on Muslims.
At the time, Xinhua reported the incident in the towns of
Elixku and Huangdi in Shache county as a “terror attack” and said police had
shot dead many attackers.
It said 30 police cars had been damaged or destroyed and
“dozens” of Uighur and Han Chinese civilians had been killed or injured.
‘Ramadan crackdown’
“This was a serious terrorist attack incident which has
links to domestic and overseas terrorist organisations and was organized,
premeditated, carefully planned and evil,” said a statement from the Xinjiang
government, posted on its website on Sunday.
The US-based activist group Uyghur American Association,
however, said sources in the region had told them that local Uighurs had been
protesting at the time of the “attack”.
The UAA said the protest was “against Chinese security
forces’ heavy-handed Ramadan crackdown and extrajudicial use of lethal force in
recent weeks in the county”.
Neither account of the violence could be independently
confirmed. Tensions between Uighurs and Han Chinese migrants have been growing
for several years, with some Uighurs opposing Chinese rule in Xinjiang.
In recent months there has been an upsurge in
Xinjiang-linked violence that authorities have attributed to Uighur separatists
and authorities have stepped up security operations in the region.
Last Wednesday, the imam of China’s largest mosque, in the
city of Kashgar in Xinjiang, died after reportedly being stabbed after morning
prayers.
Jume Tahir, 74, had been appointed imam of the 600-year-old
mosque by China’s ruling Communist Party and he was a vocal public supporter of
Chinese policies in the region.
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