China sentences three to death for Tiananmen Square attack

Five people died when car driven into crowd by suspected Islamist militants

Vehicles travel along Chang’an Avenue as smoke raises in front of a portrait of late Chinese chairman Mao Zedong following an attack by Islamist militants at Tiananmen Square in Beijing last  October.  File Photograph: Reuters
Vehicles travel along Chang’an Avenue as smoke raises in front of a portrait of late Chinese chairman Mao Zedong following an attack by Islamist militants at Tiananmen Square in Beijing last October. File Photograph: Reuters

China sentenced three people to death today for a deadly attack at Beijing's

Tiananmen Square last October, state television reported, an incident blamed by the government on Islamist militants.

Another attacker was given a life sentence, and four others received jail terms ranging from five to 20 years.

Five people were killed and 40 hurt when a car ploughed into a crowd at the northern edge of Tiananmen Square and burst into flames. Those killed included two bystanders and three people in the car.

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Two of those sentenced, named in a state media report, appeared to have ethnic Uighur names.

The western province of Xinjiang is the traditional home of the Turkic-speaking Uighurs, and China has blamed previous knife and bomb attacks on separatists who seek to establish an independent state there called East Turkestan.

China has been on edge since a suicide bombing last month killed 39 people at a market in Xinjiang’s capital of Urumqi. Police in Xinjiang have arrested or tried dozens of suspects in recent weeks for spreading extremist propaganda, possessing banned weapons and other crimes.

Knife-wielding attackers in western China wounded four people in a crowded chess hall in the city of Hotan yesterday, state broadcaster China Central Television (CCTV) said in a separate reporttoday.

Two of the attackers died from serious injuries and a third was arrested. The motive for the attack was not immediately clear.

Rights activists and exile groups have charged that the government’s own repressive policies in Xinjiang have sowed the seeds of unrest, a claim Beijing denies. In March, 29 people were stabbed to death at a train station in the southwestern city of Kunming.

Reuters