Friday, 12 September 2014

Four sentenced in China over Kunming station attack


Defendants sit in front of police officers at a courtroom in Kunming City during the trial of four people accused of participating in an attack at a train station in southwestern China, in this still image taken from video on 12 September, 2014The four were accused of participating in a deadly mass knife attack at a Kunming station

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Three people have been sentenced to death for a deadly mass knife attack in Kunming, with a fourth jailed for life, Chinese state TV says.
The group were accused of organising the 1 March attack at a Kunming station that killed 31 people and injured 141.
The Chinese government blamed Islamic extremists from the western region of Xinjiang for the assault.
The one-day trial took place as Beijing vowed to fast-track prosecution of terror suspects especially in Xinjiang.
China has stepped up security after a series of recent attacks attributed to Muslim Uighurs from the region, which borders Central Asia.
'Intentional murder'
In a statement, the Kunming court said eight people organised the attack, of whom four were shot dead at the scene.
Three of the suspects on trial, Iskandar Ehet, Turgun Tohtunyaz, and Hasayn Muhammad, were accused of "leading and organising a terror group, and intentional homicide".
They did not take part in the attack as they were arrested two days before it trying to leave the country, it said.
The fourth person, a woman called Patigul Tohti, was accused of "taking part in a terror group and intentional homicide".
After the three men were arrested, she and the four dead suspects carried out the attack on the evening of 1 March, stabbing commuters and passers-by, the court said.
The trial opened on Friday morning, with the sentences delivered in the late afternoon. The three men were sentenced to death while Patigul Tohti was given life imprisonment, according to CCTV.
SWAT police stand on patrol in Kunming's Intermediate Court in Kunming, southwest China's Yunnan province on 12 September, 2014SWAT police were stationed outside the courtroom on Friday
Chinese mourners light candles at the scene of the terror attack at the main train station in Kunming, Yunnan Province on 2 March 2014The Kunming station attack sparked a public outpouring of grief and shock
Residents gather to watch as police seal off the site where attackers ploughed two vehicles into a market and threw explosives, killing at least 31 people, in Urumqi in northwest China's Xinjiang region on 22 May 2014In May, vehicles ploughed into an Urumqi market and explosives were thrown, killing at least 31 people
 In this 1 May 2014 file photo, a Uighur woman rests near a cage protecting heavily armed Chinese paramilitary policemen on duty in Urumqi in China's northwestern region of XinjiangAuthorities have stepped up the security presence in Urumqi and other parts of Xinjiang since the attacks
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Uighurs and Xinjiang
  • Uighurs are ethnically Turkic Muslims
  • They make up about 45% of the region's population; 40% are Han Chinese
  • China re-established control in 1949 after crushing short-lived state of East Turkestan
  • Since then, there was large-scale immigration of Han Chinese
  • Uighurs fear erosion of traditional culture
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China has seen a series of deadly attacks in Xinjiang and elsewhere which it blames on Uighur separatists.
Two have taken place in Xinjiang's capital, Urumqi, at a market and railway station, while another took place in Beijing's Tiananmen Square.
Most recently, violence left 96 people dead in Xinjiang's Yarkant. State media say it was a "terror attack" but activists say police opened fire on people protesting against a Ramadan crackdown on Muslims.
In response to these incidents Chinese authorities have launched a year-long security campaign, with scores of people arrested and jailed.
On Thursday state news agency Xinhua reported prosecutors were seeking to fast-track cases involving terror suspects, religious extremists, and manufacturers of firearms and explosives.
Courts in Xinjiang were also being instructed to speed up trials of terror cases and "deliver exemplary penalties".
But a rights group criticised the move. "There is so little information coming out of Xinjiang on how suspects are treated. The potential for abuse is great," said Maya Wang of Human Rights Watch.
Confirming reports out of Xinjiang is difficult because both access and the flow of information are tightly controlled.
Uighur activists say the suppression of Uighurs' cultural and religious freedoms is fuelling unrest in the region and attacks elsewhere in China.
Chinese authorities argue that they are pumping investment into Xinjiang to improve people's lives, and said that "terrorists" in the area have been inspired by overseas Islamist groups.

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