Alarming Trends in Chinese Society

In4ser

Junior Member
Urumqi attack kills 31 in China's Xinjiang region

Attackers in China's restive Xinjiang region have crashed two cars into shoppers at a market, killing 31 people, Chinese media reports say.

They also threw explosives during the attack in the regional capital Urumqi. More than 90 people were injured, the state-run Xinhua news agency said.

The Ministry of Public Security called it a "violent terrorist incident".

Xinjiang, which is home to the Muslim Uighur minority, has seen a spate of attacks in the past year.

Last month a bomb attack at a station in Urumqi killed three people and injured dozens more. China blamed the attack on Uighur separatists.

Information about incidents in the region, where ethnic tensions between Uighurs and Han Chinese continue, is tightly controlled.

'Multiple explosions'
One of the vehicles exploded in the attack, which happened on Thursday morning.

Pictures on weibo microblogs - China's equivalent of Twitter - taken by eyewitnesses appeared to show Thursday's attack taking place at one end of a busy market street lined with vegetable stalls.

"Witnesses said two cross-country vehicles driving from north to south ploughed into people in the market at 07:50. Explosives were thrown out of the vehicles," the Xinhua report said.

One photo showed flames engulfing a junction. Others showed at least three fire engines mobilised to put out the fire.

Local media said eyewitnesses heard multiple explosions. The injured were taken to several hospitals, Xinhua said.

China says it is pouring money into the region to improve livelihoods, but some Uighurs say their traditions - including religious freedom - are being crushed by tight Chinese control.

Tensions between the two communities erupted into violence in 2009. Riots in Urumqi left some 200 people dead.

There has also been a series of violent incidents that Beijing has blamed on Uighur separatists - including an attack last year in Tiananmen Square.

Five people were killed when a car ploughed into pedestrians and then burst into flames. The three people who died in the car were Uighurs, Chinese authorities said.

The attack at Urumqi station last month came just after Chinese President Xi Jinping had visited the region.

In March, 29 people were killed in a mass knife attack at Kunming station, in southern China, that was also blamed on Uighur extremists.

This incident comes days after Chinese courts jailed 39 people as part of what the authorities called an operation to curb the spread of audio and video materials inciting terrorism.

Those jailed included a 25-year old who had incited hatred in comments made in chat rooms and a father who had preached extremism to his son, the Xinjiang Supreme Court said.

Are you in the area? Have you been affected? You can share your photos and experiences with us by emailing [email protected] using 'Urumqi' in the subject heading.

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AssassinsMace

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I was reading up on this group and apparently they sparked some anger in Hong Kong by harassing people and of course the people in Hong Kong are trying make this a part of their crusade against Mainland Chinese in general. They make no mention that the female Jesus Christ, Lightning Deng, apparently lives in New York City. Taiwan I read has the highest number of cults per capita. This is the danger of introducing a foreign religion especially to less developed areas. They exploit poverty in order to recruit people. I'm sure the members of this church will declare these people were a part of a fringe group... as is the excuse of all religions where members of their own flock commit crimes.
 
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I was reading up on this group and apparently they sparked some anger in Hong Kong by harassing people and of course the people in Hong Kong are trying make this a part of their crusade against Mainland Chinese in general. They make no mention that the female Jesus Christ, Lightning Deng, apparently lives in New York City. Taiwan I read has the highest number of cults per capita. This is the danger of introducing a foreign religion especially to less developed areas. They exploit poverty in order to recruit people. I'm sure the members of this church will declare these people were a part of a fringe group... as is the excuse of all religions where members of their own flock commit crimes.

"Of course the people in Hong Kong" please be careful with your generalizations. I also won't blame religion on this. This group of people are cultists or something. Also, unless religion states explicitly or preach people to do those things, all of these are actions and excuses by people to act in their interests in the name of religion. Will I blame religion for this? No. I blame people's ignorance and greed and their true motives.
 
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AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
It's funny who can make generalizations and who cannot. Hong Kong blaming this group's harassment in Hong Kong on the mainland seems like a generalization to me especially when the leader is living in New York. And who criticizes the mainland on freedom of religion? I think that includes Hong Kong's religious groups.

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It's funny who can make generalizations and who cannot. Hong Kong blaming this group's harassment in Hong Kong on the mainland seems like a generalization to me especially when the leader is living in New York. And who criticizes the mainland on freedom of religion? I think that includes Hong Kong's religious groups.

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I read through the article and just see people voicing their experiences with this group. No one is blaming this group's harassment on the mainland , so I don't know where you got this idea from.

Also I don't know what you are exactly trying to say with your first sentence, especially no one here is condoning for that.
 
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AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
When they blame the mainland Chinese, that's a generalization. The article doesn't mention that the leader of this cult lives in New York City. Just like blaming the mainland for bad behaving tourists when that stereotype has been around for decades before mainland Chinese were allowed to travel. That's called a blanket generalization.
 
When they blame the mainland Chinese, that's a generalization. The article doesn't mention that the leader of this cult lives in New York City. Just like blaming the mainland for bad behaving tourists when that stereotype has been around for decades before mainland Chinese were allowed to travel. That's called a blanket generalization.

No this article isn't blaming the mainland Chinese. The article is purely focused on the practices and existences of this group why is why they went to describe how it's banned in china, listed it's practices, people's opinions, and even the neutral party(that professor), and "the other side", which is the voice from that group.

I have a feeling you might be reading too much into things this time.
 

AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
No this article isn't blaming the mainland Chinese. The article is purely focused on the practices and existences of this group why is why they went to describe how it's banned in china, listed it's practices, people's opinions, and even the neutral party(that professor), and "the other side", which is the voice from that group.

I have a feeling you might be reading too much into things this time.

I can say the same for people who generalize aren't the ones who should judge people are reading too much into things.

From what I read in other articles some mention these groups have members who are Hong Kong and Macau citizens. But according to this Hong Kong newspaper, their actions are of mainland Chinese. Sounds like manipulating it to blame China. As I've heard it from the anti-China factions in Hong Kong, everything bad is from the mainland. The people who attacked Michael Bay on the Transformers movie set in Hong Kong trying extort money is an old tradition in Hong Kong yet I again read people blaming it on the mainland. If this is a media manipulation, it's funny you don't see Hong Kong up at arms at this portrayal of hatred towards anyone from the mainland that Hong Kong people have.
 
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I have to say I don't see what you think you're seeing. The "blame mainland China for everything bad" segment of the population in Hong Kong often sees issues where there aren't any, don't catch that disease from them. Sometimes they also turn a blind eye on their responsibility for issues that do exist.
 

AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
I have to say I don't see what you think you're seeing. The "blame mainland China for everything bad" segment of the population in Hong Kong often sees issues where there aren't any, don't catch that disease from them. Sometimes they also turn a blind eye on their responsibility for issues that do exist.

You are seeing it because you just advised me of not being like them. All I do is point the finger of hypocrisy right back.
 
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