April 2014 Ürümqi attack
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April 2014 Ürümqi attack | |
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File:Urumqi Railway Station entrance.jpg
A view of Ürümqi Railway Station
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Location | Ürümqi, Xinjiang, China |
Date | 30 April 2014 7:10 pm (China Standard Time) |
Target | Ürümqi Railway Station |
Attack type
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Suicide bombing; knife attack |
Deaths | 3 (including both perpetrators) |
Injured | 79 |
Motive | Unclear |
On 30 April 2014, a knife attack and bombing occurred in the Chinese city of Ürümqi, Xinjiang. The incident, a terrorist attack, left three people dead and seventy-nine others injured. The attack coincided with the conclusion of a visit by Xi Jinping, General Secretary of the Communist Party of China to the region.[1]
At approximately 7:10 pm local time, a pair of assailants attacked passengers with knives and detonated explosives at the city's railway station.[2] Police closed off all entrances to the station in the immediate aftermath of the attack, but it was reopened at 9 PM with increased security. It is not known how many individuals were involved in the attack,[3] but two individuals are suspected.[4] The Turkestan Islamic Party has reportedly claimed the responsibility of the attack.[5]
Background
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The attack occurred on the final day of Xi Jinping's four-day tour of the region.[3] He had, only the day before, labelled Xinjiang as the "front line against terrorism" during a visit to the nearby city of Kashgar, and vowed to take a hardline against terrorism and violence attributed to Muslim Uyghur separatists, which claimed the lives of at least one hundred people over the past year.[6] It is not known if Xi was still in the province when the attack took place.[3] On the morning of the attack, he visited a mosque – located 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) away from the railway station – and urged religious leaders to foster harmony among the people in Xinjiang by giving followers a better understanding of religious teachings.[2]
Attack
At 7:10 pm local time on 30 April 2014,[1] a group of individuals used knives to attack passengers and detonated bombs at the exit of Ürümqi South Station.[2] Originally, it was thought that the explosives came from luggage situated between the station and the bus stop outside,[7] but the People's Daily stated that the attackers had "set off bombs tied on their bodies and died."[8] The scope of the blast was also disputed. While one worker at a nearby hostel had reportedly mistaken the explosion for an earthquake,[9][10] another eyewitness noted how the bomb appeared to be "home made, as the blast was not massive."[2] Initially, the attack was said to have injured fifty people, but state news media revised the figures the next morning to three killed and seventy-nine injured.[3]
It was reported that the attack was carried out by two religiously motivated suicide bombers.[11] One of them was identified as a 39-year-old from the southern Xinjiang city of Aksu.[8] According to an anti-terrorist intelligence service, a group named Turkestan Islamic Party has claimed responsibility for the attack.[5]
Initial response
After the attack, "security forces moved quickly" to the station, and later on paramilitary and riot[4] police were stationed on the entrances to the station.[1][2][12] Casualties were taken to hospital in ambulances, but taxis were also commandeered to make up numbers.[4] According to Xinhua News Agency, the area around the station was evacuated by security forces.[13] The bombing meant that the rail services ceased for about two hours, and nearby shops repaired minor damage, and tightened security.[4]
There was a cordon around the train station over the night,[4] which was lifted at 9:00 PM,[14] amid heavier police security.[3]
Many internet posts regarding the attack were swiftly censored by the Chinese government. Sina Weibo, the country's largest microblogging site, took down comments and photos pertaining to the explosion,[1] which had come through within an hour on their "Breaking News" account. It did not make any further updates for two hours.[15]
Reactions
Communist Party general secretary Xi Jinping responded to the incident by promising "decisive actions [against] terrorist attacks",[12] and stated that a “strike-first” strategy would be implemented.[9] He also called on government officials in the region to do everything they could to ensure that the injured were assisted, the crime investigated and the perpetrators punished severely.[2]
Search engine Baidu prevented certain results from appearing when searching for terms related to the attack – citing "relevant legal rules and policies"[16] – while Chinese news media simply duplicated the report by Xinhua News Agency, which is required of them when reporting on sensitive topics.[16]
References
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