Chinese state media say plane hijacked in restive western region of Xinjiang

By AP
Sunday, August 9, 2009

Plane hijacked in China’s restive Xinjiang region

BEIJING —China’s state news agency says a plane has been hijacked in the restive western region of Xinjiang, which was rocked by ethnic riots last month.

Xinhua News Agency did not give any details about the hijacking in a brief report Sunday.

A man on duty at the government office in Urumqi, Xinjiang’s capital, said he had not heard about the hijacking.

The region saw the worst ethnic violence in China in decades last month when deadly rioting in Xinjiang’s capital of Urumqi killed 197 people and injured more than 1,700, according to official count.

The government said the violence was the work of terrorists, separatists and foreign forces as part of a plot to carve up China.

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迷你倉
October 14, 2009: 10:36 pm

A court in western China’s Xinjiang region has sentenced six people to death in the first trials over July 5 riots that left nearly 200 people dead, state-run television reported.

China Central Television said one other defendant was sentenced to life in prison over the unrest, the worst ethnic violence to hit China in decades.
During the rioting, members of the ethnic Uygur minority - most of whom are Muslims - went on a rampage in attacks directed mainly at members of China’s dominant Han ethnic group.

The riots left 197 people dead, most of them Han, according to the government.

Officials at the Urumqi court refused to immediately confirm the sentences, but CCTV said the death sentences were meted out due to the severity of the crimes.

Those sentenced appeared to all have Uygur names.

Police have detained at least 718 people suspected of crimes related to the unrest, earlier reports said.

State-controlled Xinhua News Agency quoted the city’s prosecutor late last month saying 21 people had so far been charged with crimes including homicide, arson, robbery and property damage related to the riots.

Footage broadcast by CCTV showed deserted streets in front of the Urumqi court, with riot police out in force.

Urumqi has been under extremely heavy security since the riots, tightened amid a wave of needle attacks beginning in late August which Han have blamed on Uygurs.

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