Kunming station attack risks driving ethnic wedge deeper

The Dashuying area, which is known as the Xinjiang village given its sizeable population of Uighurs, has become quieter as Han locals and Uighurs avoid coming out and more police vehicles are parked along the street. Police swept a Uighur district of
The Dashuying area, which is known as the Xinjiang village given its sizeable population of Uighurs, has become quieter as Han locals and Uighurs avoid coming out and more police vehicles are parked along the street. Police swept a Uighur district of the Chinese city of Kunming hours after knife-wielding assailants killed 29 people in a crowded station, underscoring the risk of ethnic tension spilling over from the remote Xinjiang region. -- ST PHOTO: KOR KIAN BENG

KUNMING/BEIJING (REUTERS) - Police swept a Uighur district of the Chinese city of Kunming hours after knife-wielding assailants killed 29 people in a crowded station, underscoring the risk of ethnic tension spilling over from the remote Xinjiang region.

China has vowed to crack down on what it says are militants bent on transforming Xinjiang into an independent state called East Turkestan, but it has also emphasised ethnic unity after what it described as a terrorist attack on Saturday.

The Xinhua news agency said a "terrorist gang of eight members", with a leader identified as Abdurehim Kurban, was responsible for the attack.

State television said earlier a female suspect was wounded and captured in the attack. The official Xinhua news agency reported on Monday that three suspects, including another woman, had been caught. Four were shot dead.

Xinjiang, in China's far west, is home to the Muslim Uighur people, many of whom say they chafe at Chinese restrictions on their culture and religion.

In Kunming, capital of the southwestern province of Yunnan, many hundreds of miles from Xinjiang, members of the small Uighur community told Reuters they felt they were under a cloud of suspicion.

"I alone have already been checked three times. The police point their guns at us. We don't know what really happened," Uighur restaurant worker Aniwar Wuppur told Reuters.

Residents of Kunming's Dashuyin district, where many Uighurs live, said police came through the neighbourhood hours after the attack, rounding up dozens of people for questioning.

Several Uighur men said they had been interrogated for hours but not harmed.

One family from Xinjiang, grilling skewers of mutton over charcoal at a streetside stall, said police had stormed into their home pointing guns.

"It's very tense now. You can feel it," said the 24-year-old man running the stall, who declined to be identified. "Even though people don't say or do anything, they're staring at us all the time."

SHOCKING IMAGES, TOLL

Saturday's violence was the first major attack blamed on people from Xinjiang at such a great distance from the region since October, when a car ploughed into tourists in Beijing's Tiananmen Square, killing the three people in the vehicle and two bystanders.

Before those two incidents, violence had largely been confined to Xinjiang, which borders former-Soviet Central Asia, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India, where more than 100 people have been killed in the past year.

Chinese media has criticised foreign news organisations for their coverage of the Kunming attack, saying they glossed over the danger of extremism in China by instead finding fault with government policies for spurring dissent.

The government says Uighurs are granted wide religious, cultural and linguistic freedoms.

With shocking images of slashed victims on the Internet, the high death toll and the distance from Xinjiang, the Kunming attack will provide a ready example for government leaders who stress the growing threat they say China faces.

Experts say militant ideology does in part fuel the violence, but the level of organisation has long been disputed.

"It certainly is the case that there is continued dispute of what exactly is the nature of the physical or armed conflict between separatist forces and the Chinese state," said Mr Barry Sautman, a political scientist at the Hong Kong University of Science & Technology.

"This may change some minds about the existence of terrorist organisations in China."

"My impression is that ethnic polarisation is the driver behind this, not only religion," said Mr Nicholas Bequelin, a senior researcher at Human Rights Watch.

"Religion is the vehicle, the ready-made ideology that allows some people to embark on plans that are inhuman and brutal."

"SEND THEM ALL BACK"

Mr Zhu Weiqun, chairman of the ethnic and religious affairs committee of the top advisory body to parliament, which meets this week in Beijing, told the Communist Party mouthpiece, the People's Daily, that such violence should not be linked to specific ethnic groups.

"If we end up taking our anger about this incident out on a particular ethnic group and equate one ethnic group with violent terrorism then that is completely incorrect, this is exactly what the separatists want," Mr Zhu said.

There have been no signs of reprisals against Uighurs in Kunming, but some Han Chinese residents voiced their anger.

"They should just send them all back, and not let them come to Kunming anymore," said Ms Yang Jing at her sewing shop across the street from a Uighur restaurant.

"They're hateful. Even their small children steal things and fight, and the adults are even worse."

Others said the attack would change attitudes.

"You can't blame all Xinjiang people for this," said Mr Li Baochang, passing through the Dashuyin district.

"But suspicions are growing and sometimes, even if we don't want to, the feelings in our hearts have changed."

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.