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Deadly attacks giving China experts pause

Security analysts saw the official warnings of a terrorism threat as self-serving. Not now.

BEIJING 2008

August 13, 2008|Barbara Demick, Times Staff Writer

BEIJING — The rising number of attacks in China and their growing sophistication have confounded security experts who had believed that Beijing was exaggerating the threat of terrorism to justify its authoritarian practices.

Three security guards were stabbed to death Tuesday at a checkpoint near Kashgar in westernmost China, a desert region with a mostly Muslim population. The killings brought the death toll to more than 30 in the last eight days.


For The Record
Los Angeles Times Friday, August 15, 2008 Home Edition Main News Part A Page 2 National Desk 1 inches; 31 words Type of Material: Correction
China rights: An article in Wednesday's Section A about security concerns at the Beijing Olympics misspelled the name of Nicholas Bequelin, a China analyst for Human Rights Watch, as Nicolas Becquelin.


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Exact numbers are difficult to come by because of the secrecy imposed by the Chinese government, which is worried that the attacks will put a damper on the Summer Olympics. Dusty Kashgar is more than 2,000 miles from Beijing -- about as far as from Baghdad to Berlin. The attacks raise questions about the government's ability to keep a grip on its farthest-flung citizens.

"The Chinese are keen to show they are in control. They don't want to spoil the Olympic party. But there is no doubt, this is a significant escalation," said Rohan Gunaratna, head of the International Center for Political Violence and Terrorism Research in Singapore.

The population of China's westernmost Xinjiang region is predominantly made up of Turkic-speaking Uighurs, who have a long history of political violence against Chinese rule and previously have tried to declare independence. But what used to be a local movement has been nurtured in recent years by groups operating in Afghanistan and Pakistan, who have supplied Islamic ideology and training.

"It is not just the quantity, but the quality of the attacks that has changed. They are becoming more dangerous," Gunaratna said.

The most sophisticated of the recent attacks took place before dawn Sunday when 12 bombs exploded in close proximity at a police station, a shopping mall and a bank in the town of Kuqa. Two of the bombers were reported to be women -- a phenomenon that had been virtually unknown in China until this year.

One of the 10 assailants killed reportedly was a woman. Another attacker was reported by the official New China News Agency to be a 15-year-old girl who was injured as she tried to throw a homemade bomb.

The assailants appeared to be trained in using simple, everyday objects to deadly purpose. They also have eschewed the heavily guarded Olympic venues in Beijing in favor of easy targets.

In Tuesday's incident, which took place in the town of Yamanya, attackers armed only with knives managed to kill the three people and escape.

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