URUMQI, Sept. 8 (Xinhua) -- Recent syringe attacks
that triggered public scare in the northwestern Chinese city of Urumqi were no
simple violations but "violent, terrorist" crimes, said a police officer and a
law expert Tuesday.
The syringe attacks were neither some individuals'
practical jokes, nor simple criminal activities, but organized and planned major
adverse events, which had disturbed social order and created an atmosphere of
fear in the city, said Du Xintao, a legal affairs official with the Xinjiang
Uygur Autonomous Regional Public Security Department.
The attacks were aimed at individuals on the surface
and at unsettling groups in society, so that they were not ordinary crimes but
crimes against society and endangered public and state security, Du told a press
conference.
"They (the attacks) were copies of violent, terrorist
crimes," said Yan Yuxing, a law expert and former president of the Intermediate
People's Court of Urumqi, capital of Xinjiang.
Yan said the attacks were aimed to unsettle the
city's atmosphere and stressed that an attacker might face death penalty if the
consequence was grave.
MORE SUSPECTS
PROSECUTED
Local authorities said Tuesday another four suspects
involved in syringe attacks were prosecuted Monday for spreading false dangerous
substances.
With the help of three accomplices, Abdurusul
Abdukdale stabbeda woman surnamed Li in the neck with a syringe at about 10:30
a.m. on Sept. 3 in an underground passage in Urumqi, said the People's
Procuratorate of the city.
The four suspects were caught at the scene. The
Urumqi procuratorate approved the arrest of the four Monday.
Previously, another four suspects were prosecuted for
endangering public security.
Hundreds of people have been stabbed by hypodermic
syringes or needles in Urumqi, triggering public scare. Tens of thousands of
residents took to the streets last week to demand security guarantees. Five
people died and at least 14 were hospitalized for injuries during the protests.
Police have caught 45 suspects amid the syringe
scare, of whom 12 are in police custody. Eight people have been sent for forced
isolation of drugs, according to Urumqi police authorities.
The regional and municipal governments are tackling
the crisis. The governments have posted guards in public areas like buses,
schools and hospitals. The health department is treating victims. No death nor
any case which needs anti-virus drugs has been reported, said an official with
the regional center of disease control and prevention.
RETURNING TO NORMAL
Police on Tuesday lifted traffic controls on most
roads in Urumqi. Passengers increased on the streets and there were sporadic
congestions at different crossings. Public security staff were seen on some
buses.
Police vehicles patrolled on major streets,
broadcasting the notice that those committing syringe attacks must be punished
according to law.
Financial establishments such as outlets of the
Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, the Agricultural Bank of China, and the
Urumqi Commercial Bank were all open for business.
The city's commerce bureau has issued special permits
to vehicles transporting food, oil, vegetables and meat to ensure supplies in
the markets.
"The sales in the morning market on the Hongshan Road
near my home has returned to normal. There is no hike in prices of the
vegetables and meat," said a resident surnamed Yang.
The regional government, however, issued an order
Tuesday, requiring buyers of dangerous chemical products in Xinjiang to register
identification.
But the government said the measure was aimed at
maintaining safety in the workplace.
Companies or individuals must provide business
licenses or ID cards when purchasing any kind of chemical products, according to
the order.
"REGRETFUL" OVER HK JOURNALISTS
ROW
A top media official of the region expressed Tuesday
regrets over an alleged beating of three Hong Kong journalists in the regional
capital of Urumqi last week, but noted that they had violated local regulations.
"We are regretful over the incident," said Hou
Hanmin, director of the Xinjiang Autonomous Regional Information Office, during
a meeting with a group of Hong Kong journalists who came to Urumqi to cover the
aftermath of the riot on July 5.
"Of the three journalists, only one had a temporary
press card that allowed him to conduct interviews in the city, but the other two
didn't have. They violated our regulations," she said.
After the July 5 riot in which 197 people were left
dead and more than 1,600 others injured, local authorities stipulated that
journalists who came to cover the incident should first obtain temporary press
cards issued by the regional information office.
Citing an investigation about the alleged beating of
the three journalists on Sept. 4, Hou said security personnel found some people
were following and filming a group of protestors on a road in the city that
afternoon, and suspected them of instigating the demonstrators when witnessing
that they made profuse gestures before the demonstrators.
Hou also stressed local authorities would maintain
the media openness policy that has been employed after the July 5 riot and
security personnel would also provide protection for journalists who conduct
interviews while complying with local regulations.
Special Report:
Urumqi Riot
