33 killed, 130 hurt
China yesterday promised tough punishment for knife-wielding attackers who killed 29 people in an unprecedented train station rampage, blaming separatists from Xinjiang, as witnesses described a city in shock.
Victims spoke of black-clad attackers slashing indiscriminately as people queued to buy tickets late Saturday at Kunming station, in an incident that lasted about half an hour.
More than 130 were wounded in the attack in the city in the southwestern province of Yunnan, prompting shock and outrage nationwide. Buses and taxis ferried people to hospital.
A shop worker told AFP some of the victims took refuge in her store.
"Many were crying and some looked like they had been cut. We were terrified. Everyone in Kunming is still in shock," she said.
Police shot dead at least four attackers, arrested one and were hunting for more, said the official Xinhua news agency, which in a commentary called the incident "China's 9/11" and a "severe crime against the humanity".
China's security chief Meng Jianzhu, who rushed to Kunming to oversee the operation, promised "all-out efforts" to "severely punish terrorists according to the law", Xinhua said.
He "urged forcible measures to crack down on violent terrorism activities", it added.
The Kunming city government said the attack was orchestrated by separatists from the northwest region of Xinjiang, Xinhua reported.
Xinjiang, a vast area home to the mostly-Muslim Uighur minority, is periodically hit by violent clashes between locals and security forces but attacks targeting civilians are rarer.
Attacks are almost unheard of in Yunnan, more than 1,600 kilometres from Xinjiang and a popular tourist destination.
The attack comes months after three members of the same Xinjiang family crashed their car into crowds of tourists in Tiananmen Square in Beijing, the symbolic heart of the Chinese state, killing two people. They then set the vehicle on fire, killing themselves, according to authorities.
It also came days before delegates from across the Communist-ruled country gather in Beijing for the annual meeting of the National People's Congress, the rubber-stamp parliament.
Victim Yang Haifei, who was wounded in the chest and back, told Xinhua he had been buying a ticket when the attackers approached.
"I saw a person come straight at me with a long knife and I ran away with everyone," he said, while others "simply fell on the ground".
Some who escaped were desperately searching for missing loved ones. None of the victims were foreigners, Xinhua quoted officials as saying.
President Xi Jinping called for "all-out efforts" in the investigation and for the attackers to be punished "in accordance with the law", the agency said.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon condemned "in the strongest terms" the "terrible attack on civilians", his spokesman said in a statement, adding he "hopes that those responsible will be brought to justice".
Xinhua said in a commentary that the attack had shrouded "the whole nation in terror".
"Mothers, sons and daughters were slaughtered by strangers," it said. "Nothing justifies such a carnage against innocent civilians. A nationwide outrage has been stirred."
Beijing maintains that unrest in Xinjiang is caused by terrorist groups seeking independence, including the overseas-based East Turkestan Islamic Movement.
But its strength and links to global terrorism are murky, and some experts say China exaggerates the threat to justify tough security measures in Xinjiang, where rights groups complain of widespread religious repression and economic discrimination.
In an emailed statement, Dilshat Raxit of the exiled World Uyghur Congress said there was "no justification for attacks on civilians" but added that discriminatory and repressive policies provoked "extreme measures" in response.
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