Beijing says Muslim Uighurs have joined Islamic State group 

A delegate, left, from the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region speaks during the Xinjiang delegation group’s meeting on the sideline of the National People’s Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing

A delegate, left, from the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region speaks during the Xinjiang delegation group’s meeting on the sideline of the National People’s Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing

Chinese officials said yesterday that members of the country’s Muslim Uighur ethnic minority have gone overseas to fight with the Islamic State group, which controls sections of Syria and Iraq, and returned to take part in plots at home.
Authorities in the far-western region of Xinjiang, which borders Afghanistan and Pakistan, will strengthen their crackdown on terrorism and extremism as a result, regional representatives said at a discussion on the sidelines of China’s legislature.
Xinjiang has seen repeated violence as members of the Muslim Uighur minority group have bristled under what they say is repressive Chinese government rule. Attacks blamed on Uighurs have also occurred in other parts of the country, including a car which plowed into Beijing’s Tiananmen Gate in 2013, killing five people.
“There are Uighurs that have fled overseas and joined the Islamic State,” said Zhang Chunxian, Communist Party secretary of Xinjiang. “The organization has a huge international influence and Xinjiang can’t keep aloof from it and we have already been affected. We have also found that some who fought returned to Xinjiang to participate in terrorist plots.” He didn’t elaborate.
Beijing has previously blamed the violence on Islamic militants with foreign connections who are seeking an independent state in Xinjiang, but has offered little evidence and ignored calls for independent investigations. Uighur groups say police have used indiscriminate deadly force against people protesting the government’s policies in the region.
The Global Times, a newspaper affiliated with the ruling Communist Party, said in December that about 300 Chinese are fighting alongside the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria.
Zhang said authorities would take measures to stop people from going abroad to fight with the group, and that he expects “fewer and fewer cases” of that happening. “We are confident that we can fix it,” he said.
Another official, Shohrat Zakir, said a yearlong crackdown on terrorist activities in the region “has won wide support from people of all ethnic groups.” AP

hong kong airlines flight diverted after bomb threat

A Hong Kong Airlines plane flying from Beijing to Hong Kong was diverted to the central Chinese city of Wuhan after getting a bomb threat.
Flight HX337, with 295 passengers and crew, landed safely at Wuhan Tianhe International Airport at 2:29 p.m., more than two hours after leaving Beijing, the airline said in a statement. Everyone aboard got off the plane safely and investigators were checking the Airbus A330-200. No bomb was reported found yet.
Calls made after working hours to the Wuhan airport and the local police’s media affairs office weren’t immediately answered.
Last month, an Air China plane bound for Beijing was forced to land in Chongqing after a bomb threat, according to China Daily. China sentenced a man to four years in prison last December for making bomb threats to an airline, the official Xinhua News Agency reported, citing a court in southwestern Yunnan province.

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