Six wounded in China train station attack

BEIJING - Six people were wounded in a knife attack at a Chinese train station Tuesday, after a string of violent episodes at transport hubs authorities blame on ‘terrorists’ from the restive region of Xinjiang.
Chinese media reports said there were as many as four attackers in white caps - often donned by Muslims - at the station in the southern city of Guangzhou. But police said later that there was only one and did not offer any details on attire.
The suspect was shot and taken to a hospital, Guangzhou police said on its official account on Sina Weibo, a Chinese version of Twitter.
Police also said there were no foreigners among the victims, all of whom were hospitalised. The incident comes less than a week after a stabbing spree and explosion at the opposite end of the country left two attackers and a civilian dead, and 79 people wounded, at a railway station in Urumqi.
The city is the capital of Xinjiang, home to the mostly Muslim Uighur minority. Last week’s blast came as President Xi Jinping was wrapping up an ‘inspection tour’ of the volatile region, during which he called for a ‘strike-first’ strategy to fight terrorism. ‘The battle to combat violence and terrorism will not allow even a moment of slackness, and decisive actions must be taken to resolutely suppress the terrorists’ rampant momentum,’ Xi said in comments published last week by the official Xinhua news agency.
Tuesday’s incident also follows a March attack at a train station in the southwestern city of Kunming. Machete-wielding attackers killed 29 people there and wounded 143 in what many in China have dubbed the country’s ‘9/11’. Authorities blamed both the Kunming and Urumqi incidents on terrorists from Xinjiang whom they say are linked to overseas extremist networks.
Foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying declined to speculate on who was responsible for the Guangzhou attack. ‘Whoever carried out this violent action and for whatever reason, they will be brought into justice because these are criminal acts,’ she said. ‘China’s government will take strong action to safeguard the life and property of Chinese people.’
Rohan Gunaratna, professor of security studies at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, told AFP: ‘The scale of violence in Xinjiang has steadfastly increased and now it is spilling over to other parts of China. ‘China faces now a very significant and a really sustained threat from terrorism.
The attack came as a train arrived at the station from Kunming, the Guangzhou-based Southern Metropolis Daily reported. It cited eyewitnesses as saying several young men wielding machetes ‘about half a metre long’ and wearing white clothing and hats began slashing at the passengers as they left the station.
Photos of the aftermath of the attack circulated widely on Chinese social media sites, with many users expressing shock and outrage. One image on Sina Weibo, a Chinese equivalent of Twitter, showed a man - his shirt stained with blood - being carried from the station by three men as passers-by watched.
Another showed a crowd of hundreds gathered outside the station’s main square, which was cordoned off by police as emergency personnel loaded people into an ambulance. ‘Guangzhou has become really unsafe!’ one Weibo user wrote. ‘Next time I see someone wearing a white hat, I’m heading the other way.’
Another user posted: ‘We have daily security checks, and the result is still that these kinds of incidents don’t stop happening.’ Mao Shoulong, a professor at the school of public administration and policy at Renmin University in Beijing, said authorities were likely to impose increased ‘vigilance’ across the country. ‘This is an important test for the government,’ he told AFP. ‘It has to firmly crack down on terrorism while imposing policies’ aimed at easing fears and suspicions of Uighurs, he added.

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