Six more sentenced to death over Xinjiang unrest
Agence France-Presse, 15 October 2009
A court in Xinjiang on Thursday sentenced six more people to death over bloody ethnic unrest in its far-western Xinjiang region in July, bringing the total to 12 as it delivered tough retribution over the violence.
Three of the six were given the death penalty with a two-year reprieve, a sentence usually commuted to life in prison, over the riots that the government says left 197 dead, in the worst ethnic violence in China in decades.
A court in the regional capital Urumqi sentenced three others to life in jail and five people to lesser prison terms for their role in the unrest that rocked the city, according to a Xinjiang government statement faxed to reporters.
The violence that erupted on July 5, which pitted mainly Muslim minority Uygurs against members of China’s dominant Han group, also left more than 1,600 injured.
A total of 21 defendants have been tried and convicted since Monday of murder and other crimes such as intentional damage to property, arson, and robbery. Security had been ratcheted up in Urumqi ahead of the trials.
Six Uygurs were given the death penalty on Monday and another sent to prison for life, in a move that Uygur exiles said would further stoke ethnic tensions in the vast region bordering Central Asia.
On Thursday, one man with a Han Chinese name – Han Junbo – was among those sentenced to death for beating a Uygur man to death, the statement said. Another apparently Han man, Liu Bo, was given a 10-year jail term.
Six of the other defendants had names that appeared to be Uygur, and the rest were not immediately identified, according to the government statement.
One of those sentenced to death, apparently a Uygur, was found guilty of beating two people to death with another defendant, as well as stealing people’s possessions, including mobile phones and bracelets.
Uygur exiles strongly condemned the first riot-related death sentences on Monday, calling them the “first of the mass executions promised by the Chinese government.”
“The Uygurs can do nothing other than hope that the world will stop China from continuing the bloody repression of the Uygur people,” a statement e-mailed to reporters by the World Uygur Congress read.
Rebiya Kadeer, the exiled leader of the congress who lives in the United States, said on Tuesday during a visit to New Zealand that the death sentences would serve only to “further enrage” her people.
France also reacted to the sentences, with foreign ministry spokesman Bernard Valero expressing regret on Tuesday “that European diplomats were not allowed to attend the rioters’ trial.”
Aside from the 21 tried this week, police have also detained around 700 people suspected of crimes related to the unrest, earlier reports have said.
Residents in Urumqi said on Thursday the city was calm amid a heavy security presence.
“We don’t worry too much but still we cannot relax our vigilance. The armed police are still on duty in bustling streets,” a woman at a drug store, who refused to be named, said over the phone.
Beijing vowed to come down hard on those found guilty, with President Hu Jintao and other top leaders saying the “organisers, key members, and the serious violent criminals must be severely punished,” Xinhua news agency said.
The country’s roughly eight million Turkic-speaking Uygurs have long complained of religious, political and cultural oppression by Chinese authorities, and tensions have simmered in the Xinjiang region for years.
Beijing says China faces a serious terrorist threat from Muslim separatists in Xinjiang, but rights groups have accused Beijing of exaggerating the threat in order to justify very tight controls in the region.
Authorities have blamed the Xinjiang unrest on “ethnic separatists”, without providing any evidence.
But Uygurs say the violence was triggered when police cracked down on peaceful protests by Uygurs over a brawl in late June at a factory in Guangdong that state media said left two Uygurs dead.
One ethnic Han man was sentenced to death and a second handed a life prison term over that brawl in verdicts announced on Saturday in southern China. – AFP
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It seems the justice is served well at least in some part of this world. Death is the only answer for the murderers.