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Knife-wielding assailants left 29 people dead and more than 130 wounded in an unprecedented
attack at a Chinese train station, state media reported Sunday, blaming separatists from
Xinjiang. Victims described attackers dressed in black bursting into Kunming station in
the southwestern province of Yunnan and slashing indiscriminately as people queued to buy tickets,
prompting shock and outrage. Police shot dead at least four attackers and were hunting for
the others, the official Xinhua news agency said. The Kunming city government said the
attack was orchestrated by separatists from the northwest region of Xinjiang, a vast and
distant area home to the mostly-Muslim Uighur minority, Xinhua reported. Xinjiang is periodically
hit by violent clashes between locals and security forces but attacks targeting civilians
are rarer, and are 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 family
from Xinjiang crashed their car into crowds of tourists in Tiananmen Square in Beijing,
the symbolic heart of the Chinese state, killing two, before setting it on fire and dying themselves,
according to authorities. A knife victim named Yang Haifei, who was wounded in the chest
and back, told Xinhua that he had been buying a train 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 managed to escape were desperately
looking for missing loved ones. "I can't find my husband, and his phone went unanswered,"
Yang Ziqing was quoted as saying. She said she had been waiting for her train to Shanghai
"when aknife-wielding man suddenly came at them". Officers sealed off a wide area around
the station, reports said, while police were questioning people at the site. The attackers
were dressed in similar black clothing, the official China News Service said, citing witnesses.
"A group of men carrying weapons burst into the train station plaza and the ticket hall,
stabbing whoever they saw," it said. State broadcaster CCTV called the incident a "terrorist
attack" on its Weibo account. President Xi Jinping called for "all-out efforts" in the
investigation and for the attackers to be punished "in accordance with the law", Xinhua
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 "notes that there is no justification
for the killing of innocent civilians and hopes that those responsible will be brought
to justice". Beijing's top security official Meng Jianzhu arrived in Kunming early Sunday
and visited the scene of the attack, which came days before the opening of the annual
session of the legislature, the National People's Congress, Xinhua reported. Xi and Premier
Li Keqiang sent condolences to the victims and their families. Photos posted on Sina
Weibo -- a Chinese version of Twitter -- showed blood spattered across the station floor and
medical staff crouching over bodies lying on the ground, although the authenticity of
the images could not be verified. The pictures showed crowds gathered outside among police
officers and ambulances. The injured had been delivered to hospitals around the city, local
television station K6 said. Pictures on the 163.com news portal also showed what it claimed
was one of the attackers, who was lying on a stretcher surrounded by police. The website
also showed a local man near the train station carrying a large stick, which it said was
for "self-defence". Images of spectacles, shoes and baggage strewn across the floor
of the waiting room behind police tape, were also posted online. A Weibo user going by
the name HuangY3xin-Dione who was at a restaurant near the scene told how she saw a group of
men in black with two long knives chasing people, Xinhua reported. Another eyewitness
told the Beijing News that she had seen two women in black walking towards the station
and that some of the attackers had their faces covered. The incident was by far the most
discussed topic on Weibo, where many users expressed their outrage at the attackers.
"Targeting ordinary people in a terrorist attack is disgraceful," said one user. "They
have nothing to do with this issue." "No matter who did this, for what purpose, and no matter
which race, to target innocent people at a train station is an evil choice. Incidents
involving Uighurs are often labelled "terrorist attacks" by Chinese authorities, although
the description is rarely used for incidents carried out by members of the Han majority
seen as having grievances against society or the state. Beijing maintains that unrest
in Xinjiang is caused by terrorist groups seeking independence, an account denied by
Uighur rights groups who complain of widespread religious repression and economic discrimination.