Terror attack in Xinjiang

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AssassinsMace

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China should do a documentary on how they do detective work. You read this article and that seemed fast. Also the drug dealer story seems interesting. Maybe they have the electronic surveillance infrastructure in place to track these people or they have good ole informants or they just do a brutal broad sweep. It would be interesting to find out their process.
 
China is the biggest buyer of Saudi oil and there is Saudi investment in a Chinese oil refinery and Chinese investment in a Saudi one. Also how can detente between Saudi Arabia and Iran ( btw not a backer of Islamic terrorists except in the eyes of US, Israel and KSA: Hezbollah defends Lebanon against Israel ) increase the danger to China?

Just because countries have an overt economic relationship doesn't mean they can't or won't overtly or covertly undermine each other. Otherwise the US and China would be the best of allies.

Proxy warriors such as jihadist terrorists fight for a cause of their own, they are merely co-opted by, and/or choose to co-operate with, sponsors against common enemies of convenience. Once the common enemy is not so common or not so convenient anymore the proxy warriors will find the next enemy to fight, sometimes the sponsors themselves. Witness the history of Al Qaeda, the Saudis, the Pakistanis, and the US.

The Saudis and Iran are not the sole sponsors of terrorism, I used them to denote two proxy warrior camps currently pre-occupied with each other but soon not to be. Once they no longer pre-occupy each other their proxy warriors will either be re-directed against other targets or find themselves new ones - China being a likely target because of accessibility, real or perceived cause for proxy warriors to fight for, and a variety of tensions with potential proxy warrior sponsors.
 

mr.bean

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China should do a documentary on how they do detective work. You read this article and that seemed fast. Also the drug dealer story seems interesting. Maybe they have the electronic surveillance infrastructure in place to track these people or they have good ole informants or they just do a brutal broad sweep. It would be interesting to find out their process.

a documentary is something the Chinese will never do. their internal anti terrorism work would remain the most secret. I think right now they are doing a very intense anti terror operation but they just don't reveal anything much to the public except some photo ops for the press when we see PAP patrolling or guarding some public place. they wont reveal anything substantial. I also noticed the Chinese press when reporting these tragic events tend to reassure citizens that the authorities are working on the problem and avoid widespread public panic. they don't want to cause any hate or public resentment directed to the minority groups involved. I would imagine their methods would be both hi tech and low tech combined with all kinds of surveillance, bugging devices and then old fashion spies, informants inside these groups. if there is one country they could or should learn, it would be Israel. they had to deal with this kind of threat for decades. a minority living within your nation but there are terrorists hiding within this group which conducts violent attacks against the general population.
 
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Equation

Lieutenant General
a documentary is something the Chinese will never do. their internal anti terrorism work would remain the most secret. I think right now they are doing a very intense anti terror operation but they just don't reveal anything much to the public except some photo ops for the press when we see PAP patrolling or guarding some public place. they wont reveal anything substantial. I also noticed the Chinese press when reporting these tragic events tend to reassure citizens that the authorities are working on the problem and avoid widespread public panic. they don't want to cause any hate or public resentment directed to the minority groups involved. I would imagine their methods would be both hi tech and low tech combined with all kinds of surveillance, bugging devices and then old fashion spies, informants inside these groups. if there is one country they could or should learn, it would be Israel. they had to deal with this kind of threat for decades. a minority living within your nation but there are terrorists hiding within this group which conducts violent attacks against the general population.

I think the reason the Chinese media does this is also NOT to give any media attention to the terrorists group which looks for and NEEDS that attention badly or else their cause will be useless.
 

JayBird

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I think the reason the Chinese media does this is also NOT to give any media attention to the terrorists group which looks for and NEEDS that attention badly or else their cause will be useless.

Exactly, giving these terrorists group media attention will only help empowering their agenda.
 

Player 0

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[tt_news]=42416&tx_ttnews[backPid]=25&cHash=d0bef6b0df632cb01ee9698af67862c3#.U4cXNfmSxWh

Here's a really good profile and study of the main terrorist groups active in Xinjiang right now.

Beijing, Kunming, Urumqi and Guangzhou: The Changing Landscape of Anti-Chinese Jihadists

Publication: China Brief Volume: 14 Issue: 10May 23, 2014 06:29 PM Age: 5 days
By: Jacob Zenn

Abdullah Mansour in a video from the Turkistan Islamic Party
During the roughly six months since China suffered its first-ever car bombing in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square on October 31, 2013, China has witnessed a series of other terrorist attacks on its territory. Such attacks included a mass stabbing at a train station in Kunming that killed 29 people, a double suicide bombing at a train station in the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region’s capital of Urumqi and a mass stabbing at a train station in Guangzhou that injured six people. The car bombings in Urumqi on May 22 made it all the more clear that the recent attacks in China are part of coordinated militant campaign against China, which is likely organized from outside China and that employs the tactics of jihadists in neighboring Afghanistan and Pakistan.

One connection between these recent incidents is that they were carried out by Uighurs, members of a Muslim ethnic group from Xinjiang. Xi Jinping and his counter-terrorism strategists are faced with the task of identifying the foreign and domestic forces behind these attacks—and around 15 other mass-stabbings and car-rammings in Xinjiang since 2011—and developing a program to counter such violence. The internal network of such militant cells is likely already in place and possibly expanding, which will provide more opportunities for the Uighur-led Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP) and its closely allied Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) to expand their jihad across the border from Afghanistan and Pakistan into China.

This article analyzes the political nature of the recent attacks in China, with an emphasis on operational connections between the attackers and international jihadist groups like the TIP and IMU.

International Connections

The TIP’s Spokesman Role

The TIP has approximately 300–500 militants in Afghanistan and Pakistan, but also a network in Turkey and possibly Central Asia (Author’s field research in northwest Pakistan, 2012). With such numbers, it is limited in its capacity to launch an insurgency in China, which has a population of well over one billion people. The only attacks in China for which the TIP showed evidence of its responsibility were the Ramadan-eve car rammings in Kashgar in July 2011, which killed 12 pedestrians. The TIP has also claimed several cart-bombings near Xinjiang’s border with Pakistan in 2012, which were likely carried out by its cells in Xinjiang (See Terrorism Monitor, Volume 10, Issue 8).

The TIP’s main “value added” in Xinjiang is mostly providing training to Uighurs who travel abroad or, likely more importantly, the clandestine distribution of jihadist ideological and training materials in Xinjiang by way of various Uighur, Pakistani or Central Asian traders.

On the international front, the TIP has become an influential promoter and “spokesperson” for Uighur militants in China and issues praise of virtually every violent incident between Uighurs and Chinese police or Han civilians. TIP leader Abdullah Mansour is a relative novice among more experienced international jihadists, but has raised the TIP’s profile among al-Qaeda and other jihadist groups. Mansour was the editor from 2008 to 2013 of the TIP’s roughly quarterly publication Islamic Turkistan, which laid out Uighur grievances against China and compared Xinjiang to other areas of the world where jihadists are fighting, such as Palestine, Kashmir and, more recently, Syria (On Mansour, see Terrorism Monitor, Volume 9, Issue 11 and Militant Leadership Monitor, February 2014). Mansour’s ascendancy to the TIP’s leadership last year was likely related to his media and marketing skills, which is reflected in the TIP’s continued sophisticated activity on jihadist forums.

Al-Qaeda leaders, such as Ayman al-Zawahiri, now usually mention “East Turkistan” among other jihadist battlegrounds, while jihadists in Syria have proudly featured Uighurs and Han converts to Islam among their fighters. Meanwhile, the TIP has praised the “jihadists” in Syria, and responded directly to Chinese accusations that the TIP is sending fighters to Syria with the help of Turkey-based Uighur human rights organizations. In the 12th edition of Islamic Turkistan, for example, the TIP wrote, “If China has the right to support Bashar al-Assad in Syria, we have the full right to support our proud Muslim Syrian people” (Islamic Turkistan, Volume 13, March 2013; Chinese Uighur fighting with FSA,” YouTube, March 29, 2013; “Chinese Man Joins FSA,” YouTube, March 18, 2013; Global Times, October 29, 2012).

IMU: ‘Go After Pakistan’s Mother’

While the TIP is still a relative newcomer to the jihadist scene—having only announced its formation around 2008, despite the presence of Uighur militants in Afghanistan since before 2001—it has benefited from the support of other well-known jihadist leaders. In particular, the emergence of IMU mufti Abu Zar al-Burmi as a prominent anti-Chinese jihadist leader in Pakistan has led to Xinjiang gaining more attention among jihadists. Al-Burmi started gaining prominence around 2011, several years after Xinjiang—which Uighurs who seek independence from China call “East Turkistan”—gained attention in jihadist media after the July 2009 riots in Urumqi. At that time, al-Qaeda affiliates and leaders such as Abu Yahya al-Libi demanded retribution against China and called for attacks on Chinese citizens abroad (China Daily, July 15, 2009). Other al-Qaeda leaders gave occasional talks on Xinjiang (Khalid al-Husaynan, “‘Purpose’ of Jihad,” Sawt al-Islam, May 4, 2013; Abu-Yahya al-Libi, “The Forgotten Wound,” as-Sahab, 2009).

Yet al-Burmi, unlike other al-Qaeda leaders, regularly issues anti-Chinese sermons in Pakistan and, perhaps because of his Burmese background (he is an ethnic Rohingya) seems to hold a personal vendetta against China. He said in a sermon called “A Lost Nation” that “mujahidin should know that the coming enemy of the Ummah is China, which is developing its weapons day after day to fight the Muslims” and blamed “Burma, China and Germany and the interests of the United Nations for supporting these massacres and mass killings [of Rohingyas] in Arakan (“A Lost Nation,” a speech for Abu Zar-Azzam, Mufti of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, 2013).”

In a sermon in Ladha, South Waziristan, in September 2013, al-Burmi, declared it obligatory for Muslims to kidnap and kill Chinese people and attack Chinese companies, which Abu Zar says have “conquered” Pakistan like the British East India company did in India (including Abu Zar’s native Burma) in the 1800s (Bab-ul-Islam, in Urdu, April 25). He blames Pakistanis for their “mantra of Pak-China Friendship,” including purchasing “infidel” food and goods from China as if “drinking milk from the Chinese government” and selling the Gwadar Port in Karachi to China (Ibid).

Al-Burmi urges his followers to turn their attention to the “new superpower” and “next number one enemy,” China, now that the Taliban “knocked the wind out” of the United States. This suggests that al-Burmi may see a role for the IMU attacking China or coordinating training of the TIP to attack China after the withdrawal of most U.S. troops from Afghanistan in 2014. In his Ladha sermon, al-Burmi continues with U.S.-China comparisons: “We should be aware of the fact that while the United States is the father of the Pakistani system and government, China is the mother of the Pakistani government. The Pakistani government drinks its milk from the Chinese government.”

He further claims that “The Pakistani president visits China every four months and goes and bows, kneels and prostrates before those atheists, who do not believe in God, and in return he comes back with aid…. We should all be aware of the fact that there is no border between Pakistan and China…the border that is along the Gilgit-Baltistan region is actually a border with East Turkestan.”

The Homefront: Politicization of Attacks

While the TIP and IMU may be active in promoting jihad from abroad, the key measure of their influence—or that of other jihadists groups—in China is the political nature and style of attacks occurring in China. The section below reviews the most recent major attacks up to the May 22 car-bombing (many details of which are still unclear at the time of publication).

Urumqi

The double-suicide bombing at the railway station in Urumqi occurred on the final day of President Xi’s three-day visit to Xinjiang, where his focus was on counter-terrorism (Xinhua, April 28). The attack, however, also coincided with the eve of the opening of the intercity railway lines linking Urumqi with Kuytun, Shihezi and Karamay, which will be a key route for distributing Xinjiang’s oil throughout China (Times of India, May 1). The attackers did not “succeed,” in that they killed only one person other than themselves, but the media attention given to these suicide bombings received overshadowed Xi’s visit and sent a message that Uighur militants can attack anywhere and anytime.

Moreover, these suicide bombings, which were the first such terrorist attacks in China, were an innovation in Uighur militancy. While no connection to the TIP has been proven, China alleges that the ringleaders trained in Pakistan, which is likely an indication of a suspected tie to the TIP (Al-Jazeera, May 21). The attack would also be similar to the suicide bombings that the TIP and IMU carry out against U.S., NATO and Pakistani forces in Afghanistan and Pakistan (SITE Intelligence Group, May 26, 2013). The beheading of two Han Chinese policemen and stabbing into 31 pieces of a third policeman in Yecheng (Karghlik), which is the closest city in Xinjiang to Pakistan, suggests there may have been a broader attempt by militants to launch attacks during Xi’s visit (Times of India, March 8, 2012; AFP, March 15).

One of the most notable portions of the Damla video includes a scene of militants in a mountainous region resembling the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region, where the militants provide a lesson on making a briefcase-bomb (Reuters [Islamabad], March 14). The TIP has issued a series of 13 videos in Uighur, with Chinese and Uighur subtitles, that teach viewers how to make homemade explosives (
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). If the TIP can encourage and teach homegrown lone wolves or independent cells in Xinjiang to carry out attacks by distributing these types of videos in Xinjiang, it would allow the TIP to encourage attacks while avoiding the risk associated with sending its militants into Xinjiang.

Tiananmen

The car-bombing in Tiananmen Square in October 2013 involved a husband, who rammed a car with his wife and mother in the passenger seats into China’s most symbolic location near Mao Zedong’s portrait in Tiananmen Square. The husband’s motive was likely to avenge the Chinese government’s demolition of an extra section of a mosque that he paid to build in Kizilsu Kyrgyz Autonomous Prefecture in Xinjiang without official permission (Radio Free Asia, November 7, 2013). Like the attack in Urumqi, the Tiananmen attack played well into TIP propaganda. Islom Awazi released a video on jihadist websites of TIP leader Abdullah Mansour praising the “jihadi operation in the Forbidden City” and claiming it was the result of an “awakening after 60 years of oppression” (
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).

Kunming and Guangzhou

The Kunming and Guangzhou train station attacks in March and May 2014 were distinct from the Urumqi train station and Tiananmen Square attacks, because neither the timing of the attacks nor locations were particularly symbolic. Both, however, were certain to cause deaths because they were in busy public locations. The involvement of two women in the Kunming attack, as well as the choice of a train station, was possibly influenced by militants from the Caucasus Emirate, whose late leader Doku Umarov was eulogized in a TIP video on May 1 (SITE Intelligence Group, May 1, 2014). Vilayat Dagestan, which claimed attacks on a train station in Volgograd and trolley in Pyatigorsk, near Sochi, in the run-up to the Olympics in Russia in February 2014 said those attacks were “because of Umarov’s orders” (The Guardian, January 19).

Conclusion

The recent attacks in Beijing, Kunming, Urumqi and Guangzhou are all victories for the TIP and its allies in the IMU. The attacks help the TIP and IMU promote China as the next frontier for jihadists as the U.S. withdraws in Afghanistan. Meanwhile from Syria and Turkey to the Gulf, there are increasing opportunities for the TIP and its supporters to network with Uighurs in Xinjiang, who hold grievances against the Chinese government. It is possible, for example, that the IMU and TIP could connect with and recruit from underground Islamist organizations in Xinjiang similar to Tablighi Jamaat, such as one called “Hijrah Jihad,” which are inspired by similar Salafist currents.

Moreover, it is likely that Uighur militancy will come to resemble al-Qaeda’s militant operations elsewhere in the world as knowledge-transfer takes place with in-person training in Afghanistan and Pakistan or Syria on simply online or in jihadist videos. The TIP may also follow the Caucasus Emirate’s strategy towards ethnic Russians, attacking Han Chinese in Xinjiang with such frequency that it causes them to leave the region and generates so much Han-Uighur animosity that Han Chinese become less willing to live, work and feel safe in Xinjiang.

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delft

Brigadier
There is a vast difference in scale between Dagestan and Xinjiang so the effect the Jamestown writer speculates about is very unlikely to occur in Xinjiang even if it is perhaps important in Dagestan.
 

A.Man

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China Moves to Calm Restive Xinjiang Region

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BEIJING — As the Communist Party struggles to tamp down a deadly wave of ethnic violence in Xinjiang, the Chinese leader, Xi Jinping, has called for tighter state control over religion and for better assimilating Uighurs into Chinese society, including moving more Uighurs from Xinjiang to other parts of China, where they can live among the Han, the nation’s dominant ethnic group.

Mr. Xi spoke at a two-day work session on Xinjiang in Beijing, attended by the party’s top officials. He said the party and the state should establish “correct views about the motherland and the nation” among all of China’s ethnic groups, so that people of every background will recognize the “great motherland,” the “Chinese nation,” “Chinese culture” and “the socialist path with Chinese characteristics.”
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The different ethnic groups of Xinjiang, the westernmost region in China, are “bound together like a pomegranate,” Mr. Xi said, referring to how the seeds are held tightly together in a fruit that is common in the region.
Photo


President Xi Jinping addressed a conference in Beijing on dealing with the ethnic unrest in Xinjiang, in northwestern China. Credit Li Xueren/Xinhua, via Associated Press
Mr. Xi’s remarks at the session were summarized in an article by Xinhua, the official news agency, that was widely printed in state-run newspapers on Friday.

Mr. Xi also defended the party’s recent policies in Xinjiang, even though those policies have led to frustration among many Uighurs, a Turkic-speaking people who mostly practice a moderate form of Sunni Islam.

“Practice has proved that our party’s ruling strategy in Xinjiang is correct and must be maintained in the long run,” Mr. Xi said.

The Xinhua article said Mr. Xi spoke of a “special policy” that he planned to put in place for the development of southern Xinjiang, which has a large Uighur population and is relatively conservative. That policy, he said, would use “special measures” to “deal with special things.” The article did not give specifics.

Another state news media report on Friday detailed extensive new security measures in Beijing, linking some of them to “antiterrorism.” Security forces in the Chinese capital have been on high alert in recent weeks for any political activity leading up to the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre on June 4, 1989. The police have already detained or questioned dozens of liberal Chinese.



The report on Beijing security said that 850,000 civilian volunteers would begin patrolling city streets to help the police maintain stability, and that 100,000 people would help with information collection. The report said civilians would be paid 40,000 renminbi, or about $6,500, if they turn in information that is critical to security. People whose day-to-day work is done on the street, like newspaper vendors and shoe cobblers, would be asked to report suspicious activity to a “social service management system,” the report said.

Security officials in Xinjiang have also been taking new measures. According to an article on Thursday in Caixin, a respected newsmagazine, security forces were taking “temporary control” of popular online messaging services. Officials have said such tools can spread dissident thoughts. Citing a police official who was not named, the magazine said that officers would monitor and censor messaging platforms, including WeChat and QQ, as well as mobile phone texting. After riots in 2009, officials in Xinjiang blocked access to most websites for about a year and closely monitored and censored text messages.


Most of China’s Uighurs live in oasis towns in the desert areas of southern Xinjiang, in border areas to the west, or in enclaves in the region’s capital, Urumqi. The Communist Party’s policies in Xinjiang have included developing natural resource industries, including oil, gas and coal extraction, an economic approach that mostly benefits ethnic Han. Officials have freely used mainly Han security forces to suppress ethnic unrest.

Officials have arrested moderate Uighur intellectuals, most notably Ilham Tohti, a professor in Beijing, who have called for fairer government policies and dialogue between Uighurs and Han. Mr. Tohti was charged in February with inciting separatism.

The party has also encouraged substantial Han migration into Xinjiang, including to large settlements called bingtuan, some decades old, that have military ties. The Han, including recent settlers, dominate most industries across Xinjiang.

Xinhua quoted Mr. Xi as saying that in addition to generally trying to improve bilingual education and employment for Uighurs, a reverse migration should be encouraged: The state should relocate Uighurs to Han-dominant parts of China for education and work, in order “to enhance mutual understanding among different ethnic groups and boost ties between them.”

A similar policy of promoting Uighur migration and employment in Han companies was a major factor in setting off the deadly rioting in Urumqi in 2009, which killed about 200 people, most of them Han. The riots began after security forces confronted Uighur protesters in Urumqi who were demanding an inquiry into a deadly factory brawl in faraway Guangdong Province. That brawl had begun over rumors that Han men at the factory had tried to rape Uighur women working there.

In recent weeks, some people living in Han-dominated provinces have said security forces in some areas are coercing Uighurs living there to return to Xinjiang, out of fear that the Uighurs might carry out violent acts.

In his remarks, Mr. Xi also emphasized strengthening state control over religion, and presumably Islam in particular. He said officials “should focus on cultivating a team of patriotic religious people and taking effective measures to improve the quality of people of the religious circle.” The positions of religious leaders, he said, should be limited to those who “love the country and love their religion.”

Party leaders have said for years that the problems in Xinjiang are rooted in separatism, terrorism and extremism.

The deadliest recent burst of violence in Xinjiang took place on May 22, when attackers drove two cars into a market in Urumqi crowded with older Han and threw explosives from the cars. At least 39 people were killed, and 94 were injured. The four attackers died at the scene. The state media later announced the arrest of a fifth person. All the suspects had Uighur names, according to state news reports.

On March 1, five people from Xinjiang attacked people at a train station in Kunming, in southwest China, fatally stabbing at least 29 civilians and injuring at least 140 others. Security officers killed four of the assailants and arrested one person, according to official news reports.

Last October, a car with three Uighurs plowed into a crowd in Beijing, killing two tourists. The car burst into flames, and the people inside died. On Friday, a Chinese news report said prosecutors in Xinjiang were charging eight people in the attack.

No group has claimed responsibility for the attacks, but because they have been aimed at civilians, many Chinese and some foreign officials say they are clearly acts of terrorism.



Chris Buckley contributed reporting from Hong Kong. Kiki Zhao and Patrick Zuo contributed research from Beijing.
 

ABC78

Junior Member
Tv report on Xinjiang terrorism.

China has released detailed evidence of how terrorists use the internet to incite violence. The East Turkestan Islamic Movement, or ETIM, has been blamed for a number of recent attacks in China, including one in Tiananmen Sq. Now State Internet Information Office has released video and pictures cataloguing the terror group's use of the internet, including spreading terror training techniques and propaganda.

[video=youtube;NRu-uZcIJUs]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NRu-uZcIJUs[/video]
 
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