China market attack kills dozens: who is to blame?

Explosives thrown from vehicles ripped through a street market in China's troubled Xinjiang region

China steps up security
(Image credit: AFP/Getty Images)

At least 31 people have been killed at an open market in Urumqi, China after attackers ploughed two vehicles into shoppers. Explosives were thrown from the vehicles, and one of the vehicles exploded. The attack is being described as a "serious violent terrorist incident" by Chinese authorities. One witness told Reuters the market was "total chaos" with hawkers and shoppers "running everywhere", while photos showed riot police on the scene and bodies lying amid flames.

The attack is the deadliest act of violence in the troubled Xinjiang region for years. Last month, three people were killed and 79 injured in a bomb and knife attack at Urumqi's south railway station, also in the western region of Xinjiang. In March, 29 people were stabbed to death and almost 150 people were wounded at a train station in the south-western city of Kunming, south-west China. Eyewitnesses at Kunming reported that attackers used curved swords and meat cleavers to stab people at random.

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