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China Disrupts Olympic
Terrorist Plot
By Daniel Schearf
10 April 2008
China's public security bureau says it has cracked two terrorist cells
plotting attacks and abductions to wreck the Beijing Olympics. The
bureau says the groups were part of an Islamic terrorist organization
wanting independence for China's western Xinjiang province, where
critics say Beijing has suppressed Muslim minorities. Daniel Schearf
reports from Beijing.
China's public security bureau says this year it arrested 45 terrorists
planning an attack at the 2008 Olympics.
China's Public
Security Bureau Spokesman Wu Heping
The bureau said the
arrests took place from January to April in two separate operations in
western Xinjiang province. They said they also seized 20 explosive
devices, more than 100 kilograms of explosive materials, and a book on
how to start a holy war.
Bureau spokesman Wu Heping said the groups were plotting attacks on
major cities and to abduct foreigners and Olympic athletes. He said some
of those arrested were ordered to watch government buildings, military
facilities, and hotels that receive foreigners.
Wu says under the orders of the "East Turkistan Islamic Movement" the
gangs planned to prepare terrorist attacks before April. He says they
were to carry out poisonings, bombings, and other terrorist attacks in
Beijing, Shanghai, and other places in May in order to disrupt and wreck
the Olympic Games.

The East Turkistan Islamic Movement is a militant group seeking
independence for China's western Xinjiang province. After the September
11, 2001 attacks, the U.S. State Department designated the group a
terrorist organization and said it had links to al-Qaida.
But critics say China has produced little evidence of an organized
terrorist threat and accuse Beijing of using terrorism as an excuse to
use heavy-handed tactics against independence-leaning Muslims. Xinjiang
is populated mainly by ethnic Uighur Muslims.
Human rights groups say China has fed the independence movement by
suppressing local culture and treating Uighurs as second-class citizens
with less access to jobs and education than Han Chinese. |