Seek news on
InfoAnda
powered by
Google
Custom Search

Last text search :
2016 wso 2.5 rw-r
2017 #1 smp wso rw-r

wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
2017 #1 smp wso rw-r
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php


Sunday, 12 July 2009 - After violence, western China looks for answers
  • Pakistanis angry over detentions in Times Sq. case
    Monday, May 24, 2010
    ISLAMABAD – Relatives of three men detained by Pakistan for alleged links to the suspect in the attempted Times Square bombing say the men are innocent.
    They
  • Taiwan denies boycotting Australian film festival
    Thursday, August 6, 2009

    AFP - Thursday, August 6TAIPEI (AFP) - - Taiwan's Beijing-friendly government on Wednesday denied boycotting an Australian film festival amid a row over the e
  • Merkel's support dips, regional ally resigns International
    Thursday, September 3, 2009

    By Sarah Marsh and Noah Barkin

    BERLIN (Reuters) - Chancellor Angela Merkel suffered a double blow on Thursday as a senior party ally in east German
  • Minister seeks closure of anti-Berlusconi websites
    Wednesday, December 16, 2009
    ROME (AFP) - – The Italian government moved Tuesday to close down Internet sites encouraging further violence against Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who
  • Asian markets mixed after Wall Street rally
    Wednesday, March 18, 2009

    By ELAINE KURTENBACH,AP Business Writer AP - Wednesday, March 18SHANGHAI - Asia's stock market rally seemed to be running out of steam Wednesday, despite an
  • Something Corporate Announce Reunion Tour Dates | 18 May 2010
  • US-TECH Summary | 20 October 2010
  • Investors warm to Motorola spinoffs, shares rise | 5 January 2011
  • All feared dead in Ethiopian plane crash | 26 January 2010


    ">Forum Views () ">Forum Replies ()

    Read more with google mobile : After violence, western China looks for answers

    Yahoo! My Yahoo! Mail Yahoo! Search Search: Sign InNew User? Sign Up News Home - Help Navigation Primary Navigation Home Singapore Asia Pacific World Business Entertainment Sports Technology Top Stories Most Popular Secondary Navigation Australia China India Indonesia Japan Malaysia Philippines Thailand Vietnam Search Search: After violence, western China looks for answers By GILLIAN WONG,Associated Press Writer AP - Sunday, July 12 URUMQI, China - It was about 8 p.m. when the mob descended on Zhongwan Road. The police didn't arrive until six hours later. In the time between, most residents locked their doors and hid, peering out through windows and listening from basements as ethnic violence raged in China's western Xinjiang province. The next morning, residents in this multiethnic neighborhood emerged to find the road covered with remnants of mayhem: puddles of blood next to overturned vegetable carts, glass shards everywhere, bricks covered with blood, and a random shoe. Ethnic minority Uighur rioters had burned down the local grocery store, owned by a majority Han Chinese family _ one of many stores attacked across the regional capital, Urumqi. Four family members were killed, and a fifth woman was still missing. On Saturday, the rest of the family was grimly sifting through the store's rubble, still looking for her body. Nearly a week after western Xinjiang province was rocked by China's worst ethnic violence in decades, residents of Zhongwan Road, both Han and Uighur, were still putting together the snippets of what they saw and heard. Many others are searching for answers about what really happened _ especially how many died and who they were. China's government released a breakdown Saturday of the riots' death toll, saying most of the 184 killed were from the Han Chinese majority. But many Uighurs disputed the new figures, citing persistent rumors that security forces fired on Uighurs during the July 5 protest and in following days during a police crackdown and retaliation by Han mobs. The unrest started last Sunday, when a few hundred students and others gathered downtown at the People's Square in the late afternoon to protest the deaths of Uighurs in fighting at a factory thousands of miles away in southern China. The police moved in to stop the demonstration from the square, and it was unclear who struck first or what triggered the violence. The Uighur protesters started to scatter, toppling police barricades, smashing windows and torching cars and attacking Hans as they rampaged through the southeastern part of the city. When the rioters turned up Zhongwan Road that night, at least one Han shop owner had an early warning about the brewing chaos. "A customer told me there was trouble headed this way and that I should close my shop immediately and hide," said the cement shop owner, who would only give his surname, Cheng. Cheng brought in his motorcycle and barricaded his metal door from the inside with bags of cement. He knelt on the floor and peered out onto the street through a narrow vertical window. He saw a group of Han residents came running down the street shouting, "Quick, hide!" They were quickly followed by a mob of 300 Uighurs armed with sticks and bricks, Cheng said. The rioters grabbed sacks of cement outside Cheng's store and set up a roadblock in front of his store to stop cars. Aile Nur, 23, a Uighur man who worked at a restaurant two doors from Yu's store, said he locked himself in his kitchen. "I could hear them shouting 'Are you Han or are you Uighur?' to each car that stopped" at the roadblock, he said. "If they were Han, they were smashed." The rioters dragged some of the people out of their cars and beat them, said the residents. Then, they turned their attack on shops run by Han people. They pounded on Cheng's door and hurled rocks into the window, sending Cheng fleeing into the basement storeroom. Police weren't showing up and emergency hotlines rang unanswered, residents said. "I started calling the police from 8:30 p.m., but I didn't get through until midnight," said a beef noodle restaurant owner next to Cheng's store who belongs to another Muslim minority called the Hui. He would only give his surname, Yu. "I could hear glass being smashed, people screaming, tires exploding," said the noodle shop owner, who estimated that at least 17 people were killed by rioters on that street alone. He looked at the rubble of the grocery store and sighed. "If the police had come on time, not so many people would have died. Their response was far too slow." Residents and relatives said the mob forced their way into the local grocery story owned by another family named Yu who supplied the area's residents _ both Uighurs and Hans _ with cooking oil, flour and rice. Four in the family were killed, but it was unclear how they died. Some neighbors said they were beaten to death. Others said they were locked in the store and burned alive. "I knew they set fire to the store when I heard the cooking gas canisters explode: 'Bang, bang, bang!'" Cheng said. It was 2 a.m. by the time the paramilitary police arrived, sirens blaring. The rioters fled, their footsteps pounding through the alleys, residents said. Sounds of sporadic gunfire followed, but no one in the neighborhood could say if any of the rioters had been shot. Fire engines rolled in and put out the blaze at the grocery store, but even at dawn, most of the shop had crumbled and plumes of smoke were still rising from the debris. Dead chickens lay in coops, charred fish skeletons were scattered among piles of rice and flour. Officials have said that 137 Han Chinese died in Urumqi, while the other victims included 46 Uighurs and one Hui. Two days after the riot, there was a Han backlash, involving large groups of marauding men with clubs, meat cleavers and lead pipes who stormed into Uighur neighborhoods. It's unclear how many Uighurs were injured or killed because the government and state-run media have downplayed the violence. Associated Press reporters were not allowed to interview the injured Uighurs in hospitals. But Uighurs on the streets of Urumqi and from exile activist groups say they think many more of their own were killed. "I've heard that more than 100 Uighurs have died, but nobody wants to talk about it in public," said one Uighur man who did not want to give his name because the city remains tense and security forces are everywhere. China has said its security forces exercised restraint in restoring stability but has not provided details nor explained why so many people died. Rebiya Kadeer, president of the pro-independence World Uyghur Congress, has said at least 500 people were killed while other overseas groups have put the toll even higher, citing accounts from Uighurs in China. China's government blames Kadeer, a 62-year-old Uighur businesswoman activist who lives in exile in the U.S., for instigating the riots with anti-Beijing propaganda. She has denied any involvement and condemned the violence. Many Uighurs in Urumqi said didn't believe Kadeer was involved in the unrest. They said that the fighting was the result of pent-up frustrations about longstanding discrimination and government efforts to subvert their religion and culture _ thouhg the government says Uighurs have benefited from Xinjiang's rapid economic development. "We don't really know Rebiya that well. We don't listen to her or follow her on the Internet," said one Uighur woman, who only identified herself as Parizat. "We don't need Rebiya to tell us what to be angry about. We live here. We know what's wrong." On Zhongwan Road, people were tallying their losses and looking for answers. Many people are still consumed with anger and fear over the violence. Yu Dongzhi's family owned the burned-out grocery store, and the mob killed Yu's brother-in-law, 13-year-old nephew, the boy's cousin and grandmother _ all found dead inside the shop. His sister is still missing "I want all the terrorists executed by firing squad. I hate them," said the 44-year-old, who works in the southern city of Shenzhen but rushed to Urumqi after hearing that his sister's family had died. Yu spoke as he leaned on his shovel in the remains of the store, where the family was searching the remains for the body of his sister, Xingzhi. He had already spent the week searching all of Urumqi's hospitals to no avail. "I haven't told my mother yet," he said. "So now I must find her, dead or alive." The group stopped digging by 6 p.m. but could not find a body. The next day, Yu decided, he would search the morgues. _____ Associated Press writer William Foreman in Urumqi contributed to this report. Email Story IM Story Printable View Blog This Sign in to recommend this article » 0 users recommend Related Articles: Asia Pacific Unpopular Japan PM's job on line in Tokyo voteReuters - Sunday, July 12 Italian hostage in Philippines freed: officialsAFP - Sunday, July 12 After violence, western China looks for answersAP - Sunday, July 12 Pakistan plans trial of Mumbai attackers next week: govtAFP - Sunday, July 12 Record-breaking Aussies pummel England in AshesAFP - Sunday, July 12 Most Popular – Asia Pacific Viewed Pushy French are world's worst tourists: study Miniskirts, cleavage upset male SKoreans: survey Jackson 'best father' ever, daughter tells the world Jackson mother relieved of estate on funeral eve German mother gives birth to identical triplets View Complete List » Search: Home Singapore Asia Pacific World Business Entertainment Sports Technology Top Stories Most Popular Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Southeast Asia Pte Ltd. (Co. Reg. No. 199700735D). All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Community - Intellectual Property Rights Policy - Help

    Other News on Sunday, 12 July 2009
    Brown defends Afghan strategy as deaths mount
    Bosnia buries, mourns Srebrenica massacre victims | International |
    Iraq bombings kill 8 in capital, northern village
    Isolated Honduras hunkers down, Zelaya vows action | International |
    Iraq car bomb kills four
    Police, ultra-Orthodox Jews scuffle in Jerusalem
    Italian hostage in Philippines freed after 6 months | International |
    Israeli police drag away ultra-Orthodox protesters | International |
    'Survivor' winner Hatch seeks confinement reprieve
    NASA delays space shuttle launch by a day
    Pittsburgh scholarships saving schools, students
    Hispanic rights group at center of Sotomayor fight
    Judge grants delay in Jackson guardianship case
    The Nation's weather
    WVa Lottery player still on a roll, wins 9th prize
    Texas deputies say couple having sex in drug car
    Ex-convicts working to prevent future convicts
    Australian concerned for Rio employee China holds
    Hong Kong lawmakers approve Disney expansion
    China approves $6.3 billion construction IPO
    Jackson's dad suspects foul play in death | Entertainment |
    Island Records stars pay tribute at Montreux Jazz Festival
    Dillinger's Ohio crime spree left out of new movie
    Comic Artie Lange charged with DUI in NJ
    Isolated US convoys in Afghanistan ambush targets
    Clashes kill eight rebels, police officer in Caucasus: report
    Bloggers held on hooliganism charges in Azerbaijan: rights group
    Obama: Africa aid must be matched by good governance | International |
    Worst yet to come: White House economic advisor
    Attack ruled out in oil tank fire in Xinjiang | International |
    Escada may cease trading: Board
    Kurdish murder in Vienna still in mystery 20 years on
    Australia warns of risks to delay in China spy case | International |
    Iraq bombings kill 10 in capital, northern village
    Isolated Honduras hunkers down | International |
    Nigeria rebels, government agree amnesty: lawyer | International |
    US soldier in Iraq sentenced in comrade's shooting
    Pakistan, India meet may lead to dialogue | International |
    Israeli police drag away ultra-Orthodox protesters
    Italian hostage in Philippines freed after 6 months | International |
    Police, ultra-Orthodox Jews scuffle in Jerusalem
    Unpopular Japan PM's job on line in Tokyo vote | International |
    Peru's Garcia names party insider prime minister | International |
    Unpopular Japan PM's job on line in Tokyo vote
    Italian hostage in Philippines freed: officials
    After violence, western China looks for answers
    Pakistan plans trial of Mumbai attackers next week: govt
    Record-breaking Aussies pummel England in Ashes
    Macau's sole leadership candidate denies link to land deal
    Scholar: NKorea wants US show of remorse
    Talks intensify over closing Calif.'s $26B deficit
    Swiss gov't: legal battle over nuclear case
    From a Delhi kebab stand, lessons in Indian life
    Body found at NY building where woman went missing
    Tribal region poses harsh test for Pakistan army
    Obama urges Africans to fight tyranny, corruption
    Attack ruled out in oil tank fire in Xinjiang
    US military deaths in Iraq war at 4,323
    Relatives go to Ill. cemetery looking for answers
    Palin says Alaska needs new ethics policy
    AP sources: Cheney told CIA not to discuss progam
    Fla. officials find van in panhandle slaying
    Banderas says financial crisis hurting indie film-makers
    Gibson, Foster team up for 'Beaver': report
    Summer bonuses plunge record 16.6 percent in Japan
    Report: NKorean army suspected over cyberattacks
    India will clock high growth despite recession: PM
    Austrians say outrageous Bruno is pretty funny
    London's Royal Ballet to make Cuba debut
    Cash-strapped California quizzes Jackson costs
    Australian shot dead at Freeport mine in Indonesia
    Banderas says financial crisis hurting indie film-makers
    Danny DeVito serves lemon liqueur at festival
    Gibson, Foster team up for 'Beaver': report
    Austrians say outrageous Bruno ist pretty funny | Entertainment |
    Iran threatens legal action over U.S. detentions
    Swiss Al-Qaeda hostage freed in Mali
    Afghans turn to Taliban in fear of own police | International |
    NASA to try to launch space shuttle Endeavour
    German exporters say world trade picking up
    Israeli PM calls on Abbas to meet
    Bombs kill 4 U.S. soldiers in south Afghanistan | International |
    Police bulldoze migrant camp in Greek port
    EU, Turkey set to sign Nabucco pipeline deal
    Swatch expects sales to improve in second half
    Palestinians reject any Israel-U.S. settlement deal | International |
    Guinea army on alert, says drug dealers plan attack | International |
    Fighting kills at least 43 in Somali capital | International |
    Sri Lanka president names new military chief
    Sotomayor gets nod from police chiefs
    Jackson, healthy or not? Depends on who's talking
    US says Kyrgyzstan base deal will boost security
    AP source: Holder considering torture probe
    China's Xinjiang under heavy security as stability urged
    Obama believes Merkel 'has already won' election: report
    Injured toll from China riots raised to 1,680
    Obama urges patience on economic stimulus plan
    China-Taiwan forum urges reducing language gap
    Japanese protest violence in China's far west
    Red Cross worker freed by militants in the Philippines
    Iranian-Americans rally in front of White House
    CIA praises Philippine efforts to rout terrorists
    Special alloy sleeves urged to block hackers?
    NASA to try to launch Endeavour on Sunday
    Police say ambush kills 5 officers in NW Pakistan
    China city tense but calm 1 week after riots
    Ericsson to invest $1.5 bln in South Korea
    Pakistan to talk with WB, ADB for IMF loan review
    Ericsson to invest in R&D centre in South Korea
    Australia: Rio detention could hurt China business
    Nomura tie-up with India's largest life insurer
    Jackson, healthy or not? Depends on who's talking
    Paul Ricard, the drinks magnate drunk with art
    Obama calls for higher education revamp in US
    Freeport: Guard killed near Indonesian mine
    Freeport: Security guard killed in Indonesia
    Gunmen pre-planned fatal shooting in Papua: police
    Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
    Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
    Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
    AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
    The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
    AMD to Start Production of piledriver
    Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
    Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
    Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
    ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
    Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
    What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
    AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
    Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
    Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
    Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights

    [InfoAnda] [Home] [This News]



    USD EUR - 1 year graph

    BlogMeter 1.01