BEIJING: China has sentenced four people to death over unrest in the ethnically-torn Xinjiang region, state media reported Thursday, after vowing to crack down on “terrorism” in the troubled far-western area.
Two others were jailed for 19 years over a wave of deadly violence in July in the region, where the mainly Uighur minority has long chafed against Chinese rule.
The four were handed the death penalty Wednesday after being found guilty a day earlier of masterminding and engaging in terrorist organisations, illegally making explosives, murder and arson, the official Xinhua news agency said, citing the local tianshannet.com website, which is also state-run.
The report said the two who received jail sentences were “accomplices” in the violence.
The guilty verdicts were handed down by intermediate courts in remote Kashgar and Hotan, it said.
The rulings related to a July 18 assault on a police station in Hotan which killed four people, and two attacks on July 30 and 31 in Kashgar that left 13 dead, Xinhua said, without specifying how many were sentenced over each attack.
The incidents formed part of a wave of unrest that killed at least 21 people, including eight suspects allegedly involved in the attacks, prompting the top official in Xinjiang to vow a tough crackdown.