An exiled group of China's Uighur Muslims said Thursday that police have arrested more than 100 people
following the August 4 attack in Kashgar city which killed 16 paramilitary
officers, dpa reported. The attack, which China said was carried out by two Uighur men, was among a string of deadly assaults carried out
against government, police and security personnel in north-west China's tense Xinjiang region before and during the Beijing Olympics. At least 26 people
were killed in a 10-day period.
Those arrested include people who came to Kashgar from surrounding counties and
towns, said Dilxat Raxit, spokesman for the Munich-based World Uyghur Congress.
Some of the detained were beaten and had wounds to their head and legs, Raxit
said, citing local sources.
One Kashgar official contacted by Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa Thursday said:
"There weren't that many people arrested," but refused to elaborate.
Another official said he was not aware of the situation.
Meanwhile, Kashgar's Shule county government has shut down its website after it
was hacked. The flag used by Uighur separatists to represent an independent
state of East Turkestan was posted on the website, along with a message calling
for independence, the Uighur group said.
The website was inaccessible Thursday, but local officials could not be reached
to comment.
The exiled Uighur group also released a copy of a bulletin it said it obtained
revealing that the Kashgar government has called for a stepped up campaign
against Uighurs following a meeting Monday by local officials to
"stabilize the situation."
The bulletin called for stepping up surveillance and control, including
focusing on people who are loners, secretive in their speech or actions or are
devout Muslims, including those who go outside their community for religious
services.
"At roadside checkpoints into Kashgar, they pay special attention to
people who appear religious, including men with beards and women who wear head
scarfs," said Raxit.
The bulletin also calls for stepping up patrols of neighbourhoods and
monitoring of religious activities.
The number of people arrested will likely go up, Raxit said, urging the
international community to adopt a more effective and concrete plan to pressure
Beijing to stop "trampling on" Uighurs' rights.
Human rights groups have criticized China for not making a distinction between
violent terrorists and Uighurs expressing peaceful dissent, including those who
favour independence, which they said should not be a crime.
Earlier the Uighur group said about 90 people were arrested following a series
of bombings in Kuqa county on August 10. Ten "terrorists" were killed
by police bullets or their own bombs, the government said.