China ethnic unrest continues

URUMQI, China,  (Reuters) – Paramilitary police fanned  out in the far-flung Chinese city of Urumqi yesterday to try  to stifle unrest days after 156 people were killed in the  region’s worst ethnic violence in decades.

Han Chinese took to the streets for the second day running,  and even with helicopters overhead there were scuffles in at  least one crowd of about 1,000 as police appeared to seize  ringleaders, prompting cries of “release them”.

Urumqi, capital of the northwestern region of Xinjiang,  imposed a curfew the previous evening after thousands of Han  Chinese armed with sticks, knives and metal bars stormed through  the city seeking revenge against Muslim Uighurs for Sunday’s  violence.

The instability prompted President Hu Jintao to abandon  plans to attend a G8 summit in Italy and return home to monitor  developments in energy-rich Xinjiang, where 1,080 people were  wounded in rioting and 1,434 arrested.

Financial markets appeared unaffected and life was returning  to the streets of Uighur neighbourhoods.

Residents said night-time arrests were continuing and they  had amassed collections of bricks and metal rods, and set up  impromptu barricades to defend themselves against further Han  attacks.

Officials played down the unrest as heavy security,  including thousands of security forces and armed personnel  carriers, brought peace to central parts of the city.

“Most of the public were quite restrained,” Urumqi’s  Communist Party Boss Li Zhi said of Tuesday’s violence.

“A handful of Han attacked Uighurs and there were a handful  of Uighurs who attacked Han … this handful of violent elements  has been caught by the police and now the situation has been  quelled,” he added at a news conference in the Xinjiang capital.

There was no official curfew, although by early evening the  streets were emptying and vehicles with bullhorns drove around  telling people to “go home as quickly as possible”.

The government has given no details of the number of injured  on Tuesday or whether anyone was killed, and the lack of  information was fuelling rumours.

A man in his 50s, who gave his name as Mohammed Ali, said he  had heard from neighbours and friends that two men had died and  two were seriously wounded. Others reported a higher toll.

“Now we are scared to go anywhere,” Mohammed Ali told  Reuters. “Doing even simple things becomes frightening.”

The population of Urumqi, about 3,300 km (2,000 miles) west  of Beijing, is mostly Han.

Some of the Uighurs’ fears were borne out downtown. In one  street, two young boys were surrounded by an angry Han mob, with  dozens trying to pull them down and grabbing their hair.