CNN:
China train station killings described as a terrorist attack
By Tom Watkins and Ralph Ellis, CNN
updated 11:37 AM EST, Sun March 2, 2014
(CNN) -- A day after men armed with long knives stormed a railway station in the southwest Chinese city of Kunming, killing dozens of people and wounding more than 100, authorities described what happened as a premeditated terrorist attack.
Police shot dead at least four of the attackers -- who numbered more than 10 -- and were looking for the others, officials told the state-run Xinhua News Agency.
Premier Li Keqiang asked that security in public places be tightened.
But for Chen Guizhen, that request came too late.
The 50-year-old woman told Xinhua at the hospital that her hu*****and, Xiong Wenguang, 59, was killed in the attack.
"Why are the terrorists so cruel?" asked Chen, her hu*****and's bloody ID card shaking in her hands.
The attackers gave no warning.
Liu Chen, a 19-year-old student from Wuhan, capital of central China's Hubei Province, was at the station to buy tickets when the attack began.
"At first I thought it was just someone fighting, but then I saw blood and heard people scream, and I just ran," she said.
Lu Haiyan said the slaughter began while she and a friend were standing in the ticket hall of the train station.
"Suddenly, many people started running around crazily," she said on Tencent Weibo, a Chinese equivalent of Twitter. "We saw two people carrying big cleavers hacking whoever is in the way. They almost got to my back. Then I lost contact with (my friend) and I saw blood splashing in front of me."
As is common in the aftermath of attacks, the casualty figures were in flux: in the same story, Xinhua reported that at least 28 civilians had been killed and 113 wounded and that 29 were confirmed dead and more than 130 wounded.
Members of a separatist group from Xinjiang, in northwest China, are believed to have carried out the assault, authorities said. The report referred to them as terrorists.
Police said that, in addition to killing at least four attackers, they had shot and wounded a female suspect.
Train departures were not affected, Xinhua reported, citing the railway bureau.
In the aftermath, postings on Sina Weibo, another Twitter-like social medium, showed local police patrolling the station, where bodies lay on the ground in blood. Chinese state TV showed investigators placing a knife -- its blade at least 2 feet long -- into an evidence bag.
Mass knife attacks are not unprecedented in China. Some occurred in 2010 and 2012, but the attacks happened at schools and didn't appear to have political connections.
Chinese President Xi Jinping urged law enforcement "to investigate and solve the case and punish the terrorists in accordance with the law," according to Xinhua.
Kunming's railway station is one of the largest in southwest China.
Two weeks ago, 11 "terrorists" died in the Xinjiang region, Xinhua reported.
Frequent outbreaks of violence have beset Xinjiang, a resource-rich area where the arrival of waves of Han Chinese people over the decades has fueled tensions with the Uyghurs, a Turkic-speaking, predominantly Muslim ethnic group.
CNN's Phil Gast contributed to this report.
Washington Post
China blames Xinjiang separatists for knife attacks at train station
By Didi Tang,
KUNMING, China — Authorities on Sunday blamed a slashing rampage that killed 29 people and wounded 143 at a train station in southern China on Xinjiang separatists, rounding up members of the city’s small Muslim Uighur community for questioning.
Police fatally shot four of the assailants — putting the overall death toll at 33 — and captured another after the attack late Saturday in Kunming, the capital of Yunnan province, the state-run Xinhua News Agency said. But authorities were searching for at least five more of the black-clad attackers.
State broadcaster CCTV said that two of the assailants were women and that one had been slain and the other detained.
“All-out efforts should be made to treat the injured people, severely punish terrorists according to the law and prevent the occurrence of similar cases,” said China’s top police official, Politburo member Meng Jianzhu, who arrived in Kunming early Sunday, an indication of how seriously authorities view the attack.
The U.N. Security Council on Sunday issued a news release that “condemned in the strongest terms the terrorist attack” on the train station. The statement reiterated that “any acts of terrorism are criminal and unjustifiable regardless of their motivation” and underlined the need to bring those responsible for the attack to justice.
The attackers’ identities have not been confirmed, but Xinhua said evidence at the scene showed that it was “a terrorist attack carried out by Xinjiang separatist forces.”
The far western region of Xinjiang is home to a simmering rebellion against Chinese rule by some members of the Uighur population, and the government has responded with heavy-handed security there.
Conflicts in the region have resulted in hundreds of deaths, but most of the violence has been contained to Xinjiang.
Sean Roberts, a cultural anthropologist at George Washington University who has studied Uighurs and China for two decades, said the Kunming violence, more than 900 miles from Xinjiang, would be a new kind of attack for ethnic Uighurs: premeditated, well-organized and outside the disputed territory.
“If it is true that it was carried out by Uighurs, it’s much different than anything
we’ve seen to date,” Roberts said by phone.
But he added that it is still unclear whether there is any organized Uighur militant group and said that the recent attacks do not appear to be linked to any “global terrorist network, because we’re not seeing things like sophisticated explosives or essentially sophisticated tactics.”
— Associated Press