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Posts Tagged ‘security presence’

China turns back Xinjiang plane

Map

An aircraft bound for Urumqi in China’s restive Xinjiang region has been threatened with a bomb attack, Chinese state news agency Xinhua reports.

Airport officials were told not to let the plane to land, Xinhua said. It later said the plane had landed in Kandahar, citing diplomatic sources.

The agency had earlier reported the incident as a hijacking.

It did not specify whether the threat to the plane came from on board the aircraft itself, in its latest report.

The incident comes a month after about 200 people died in ethnic violence in Xinjiang’s regional capital, Urumqi.

Deadly clashes erupted between Han Chinese and the region’s Muslim Uighurs, some of whom want greater autonomy from China.

Since then China has maintained a heavy security presence in the region.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

General urges bigger Helmand force

General Sir Richard Dannatt says success in Helmand can only be achieved with more British, US or Afghan troops

The head of the British army said that more coalition troops were needed in the Afghan province of Helmand to provide the security for its people to go back to their ordinary lives.

General Sir Richard Dannatt said that “more boots on the ground” were key to success in Helmand, though he stressed that it did not matter whether they belonged to British, American or Afghan troops.

Dannatt, paying his last visit to Afghanistan before retiring later this month, also said he would like to see “more energy” put into speeding up the provision of equipment to UK troops.

He was transported around Afghanistan by a US Black Hawk helicopter from a pool of resources shared by British and American forces, and said it was important that the UK was able to put as much into that pool as it took out.

“I have said before, we can have effect where we have boots on the ground. I don’t mind whether the feet in those boots are British, American or Afghan, but we need more to have the persistent effect to give the people [of Helmand] confidence in us,” Dannatt told BBC Radio 4′s Today programme.

In the town of Sangin, the scene of fighting between British troops and the Taliban over recent years, control had been imposed to such an extent that local people were willing to bring their goods to what is now a bustling market, he said. That could only be maintained by a security presence on the ground.

Asked whether Britain’s 9,100-strong force in Afghanistan has the equipment it needs, Dannatt said: “We have got a plan to increase the amount of campaign equipment we have got. It has probably not moved as fast as I would have liked it to have moved, but we are increasing the numbers.

“I would like to get more energy behind it if we possibly can.”

Noting that he was being transported in a US helicopter, Dannatt said: “There is a pool and we share the assets, but we have got to put as much into the pool as we take out.

“We are reworking a number of Chinook helicopters – eight – which will come on line soon, and a number of Merlins that were previously in Iraq … Air mobility is a key enabler and I know the commanders need a lot of that.”

After 15 British deaths so far this month in Afghanistan, Dannatt said it was “a sad fact and part of reality” that casualties would occur during operations to tackle the Taliban insurgency.

“Of course, we do the absolute maximum we can to protect our people and give them as good equipment as we can, but we are pushing to increase our influence and increase the number of people who are exposed to our influence,” he said. “When we push, inevitably there is a possibility of taking casualties.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Urumqi officials back down on mosque closures

• Police break up small protest after Friday prayers
• DNA tests begin on victims of ethnic violence

Riot police broke up a small group of Uighur protesters outside a mosque in the troubled capital of Xinjiang after officials relented on an earlier decision to cancel Friday prayers.

Earlier, hundreds of Uighur men had gathered at the gates of mosques in Urumqi despite notices saying services were suspended. Officials cited “safety” reasons after brutal inter-ethnic attacks which began on Sunday.

Police had begun DNA testing to identify 156 people killed that day, thought to be primarily Han Chinese targeted by Uighur rioters, state media reported. The official news agency Xinhua said authorities would pay the families of “innocent” victims 200,000 yuan (about £18,000) compensation.

More than 1,000 people were injured in the riots. Subsequent days saw revenge attacks on Uighurs by Han Chinese, but no details of resulting fatalities or other casualties have been offered. Several Uighurs told the Guardian they believed at least four people had died.

The mood in the city appeared to have calmed but a heavy security presence remained, with armoured personnel carriers parked at the Grand Bazaar – where the violence began – and trucks full of troops touring the streets. Loudspeaker vans drove around the city urging people not to be swayed by “criminal elements”.

The attempt to close the mosques appeared to be prompted by the authorities’ anxieties about large crowds. At the Yang Hang mosque, Uighurs applauded and up to 400 worshippers carrying prayer mats flooded in as the doors were unlocked. A notice cancelling the day’s service disappeared from the front gate.

About 100 men won the day at the popular White mosque after demanding that guards allow them in for prayers. A Uighur policeman guarding the building, who declined to give his name, told the Associated Press: “We decided to open the mosque because so many people had gathered. We did not want an incident.”

At the Dong Kuruk Bridge mosque, one of several to remain closed, a young man told Reuters: “We feel we are being insulted. This is our mosque. But we are not allowed in, while they let in non-believers.”

He said Chinese security forces had been stationed inside and even in the minarets.

At another mosque, used primarily by Hui Muslims, Uighurs were among those allowed to enter but there was no formal service. “It’s a shame they don’t allow us to practise our religion,” said a passer-by.

Many people prayed at home instead, residents of Uighur neighbourhoods said.

The secretary-general of the Urumqi Islamic Association, who gave his name as Ma, denied the authorities had ordered the closures. But an official at the Urumqi Administration for Religious Affairs said only mosques in areas not affected by the violence were allowed to remain open.

Barry Sautman, an expert on China’s ethnic policies at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, said the 23,000 mosques in Xinjiang gave it the highest mosque-to-Muslim ratio in the world. “It’s impossible to control such an extensive number of religious personnel,” he told AP.

About 30 or 40 Uighurs launched an impromptu march near the White mosque this afternoon, crying and pumping their fists in the air and demanding the release of men detained this week. One begged foreign reporters to stay with them as they walked.

“Every Uighur people are afraid,” Madina Ahtam told AP. “We are afraid … The problem? Police.”

Security forces initially stood back, but when the demonstration continued they surrounded and detained protesters. Footage shot by the BBC showed riot officers kicking one demonstrator and punching another in the face. They detained journalists filming events.

In Kashgar, a mainly Uighur city in southern Xinjiang, officials ordered foreign media to leave, escorting some journalists to the airport. They had earlier prevented them from leaving their rooms.

“There are no conditions for interviews in Kashgar, so we hope the foreign reporters will leave for their own safety,” said Chen Li, a media officer with the city government.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds