Five dead in latest unrest in far-west China

URUMQI, China, (Reuters) – Five people died in unrest  this week in the far-west Chinese city of Urumqi, its deputy  mayor said yesterday, after a third day of protests which were  broken up by police using tear gas.

Han Chinese protesters massed in the capital of the Xinjiang  region, angry at authorities they blamed for failing to control  a spate of syringe attacks and being slow to bring to trial  ethnic Uighurs charged with deadly rioting on July 5.

The demonstrations are a rare direct challenge to the  government by middle class urbanites, and could inflame ethnic  resentments as Beijing prepares to showcase the nation’s  achievements on Oct. 1, the 60th anniversary of Communist rule.

Troops blocked protesters’ access to neighbourhoods that are  home to Uighurs, a Turkic-speaking Muslim people native to the  energy-rich region.

Faced with deteriorating support among the majority Han  Chinese, Beijing dispatched public security minister Meng  Jianzhu to Urumqi, where he urged officials to “restore social  order as soon as possible”.

The unrest came two months after deadly ethnic riots swept  the city, killing at least 197 people, most of them Han Chinese.  The July 5 riots began after police stopped Uighurs  demonstrating against the deaths of Uighur factory workers  attacked by Han co-workers in southern China in late June.

Among the five who died on Thursday, two were “innocent  civilians”, while police were still investigating the other  deaths, Deputy Mayor Zhang Hong told a news conference. He did  not specify the ethnic backgrounds of the dead nor how they  died.